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The Southern Appalachians
A Bibliography and Guide to Studies
By
Robert F. Munn
WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARY
MORGANTOWN
1961
APPAL. RM.
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Library
West Virginia University
The 'Mountain People' of Appalachia are
ci-devant heirs of Western Civilization who
have relapsed into barbarism under the de-
pressing effect of a challenge which has been
inordinately severe.
Arnold J. Toynbee, A Study of History
Vol. II p. 312
The Southern Mountaineer is, all in all,
the most admirable type of American. School-
ed to simplicity, not lacking in vigor, he
keeps in great degree the powers that pre-
serve nations.
Arthur W. Spaulding, The Men of the
Mountains p. 3.
ii
Table of Contents
Introduction 1
Abbreviations 5
General References 7
Social & Economic Studies of Cities, Counties & Areas 13
Local Government 21
Family Life. Children 22
Intelligence & Aptitude 25
Public Health. Nutrition 27
The Mountaineer in the City 30
Population Changes. Migration 32
Coal Mines & Miners 36
Health 37
Labor Relations 38
Life in the Coal Country 40
Economics 42
Miscellaneous 43
Religion 45
Negroes, Indians & Other Minority Groups 49
Education 51
Attendance 51
Educational Surveys 52
Finance & Administration 54
History 5
>.>
Negro 57
Private, Church & Folk Schools 58
School & Community 63
Teachers 64
Libraries 6">
Miscellaneous 66
Agriculture 71
Forestry 76
Folklore, Customs 78
Music 80
Speech 82
Crafts 83
Miscellaneous 85
Index 92
111
97993Q
Introduction
THe creation of an extensive literature on the Southern Appalachians
has been a comparatively recent development. Horace Kephart,
one of the first important students of the region, complained that in 1905
he could not discover "so much as a magazine article, written within
this generation, that described the land and its people. . . Had I been
going to Teneriffe or Timbuctu, the libraries would have furnished
information a-plenty; but about this housetop of eastern America they
were strangely silent, it was terra incognita." 1 This situation changed
rapidly during the next thirty years. Books, articles, pamphlets and
official documents appeared by the hundred. By 1935 Everett Edwards
was able to locate some 830 references to the Southern Appalachians.
A quarter of a century later the number reaches into the thousands.
The quality of this writing has in no sense increased with the
quantity. Indeed, a strong case can be made for the statement that
more nonsense has been written about the Southern Appalachians than
any comparable area in the United States. The nature of this literature
has been remarkably consistent. As early as 1926 Florence Ridgway
detected a pattern which has remained valid to this date.- There were,
she felt, three main types of authors writing about the Southern Appa-
lachians. The first, the Exploiters, have been in the majority, and have
largely created the popular stereotype of the shiftless, ignorant and law-
less mountaineer. The second major group is made up of the Enthu-
siasts. Many of these have been almost painfully well-intentioned, but
have often fallen victim to their own causes and panaceas. In this group
one may also place the innumerable romanticizers of the area— those
whom John Day characterized as "quaintness mongers" and "ballad
pushers." The third group, still regrettably small, is composed of those
who write with insight and accuracy.
A review of the literature suggests that both public and academic
interest in the Southern Appalachians has been quite erratic. Long
periods of more or less complete indifference have been broken by often
short-lived campaigns to "do something" for or to the mountaineer.
Throughout the Nineteenth Century and during the first decades of this
century serious and sustained interest in the area was confined largely
to religious and philanthropic groups. This was the great era of the
settlement school and the missionary. The 1930's saw a marked change
in emphasis. Political action and massive governmental aid began to be
] Horace Kephart, Our Southern Highlanders (New York: Outing Publishing Company,
1913), p. 13.
-Florence H. Ridgway, "Friendly books for quiet nooks," ML&W Jl 1926 p. 11.
1
viewed as the only solution. During the early 1930's the Southern Ap
paiachians were "discovered" by the American Left. There developed a
vast and generally polemical literature describing the region's wretched
social and economic conditions. This interest waned almost as suddenly
as it had arisen, and a marked decline in the volume of writing about
the Southern Appalachians was evident during the 1940's and the early
1950's.
The current revival of interest in the Southern Appalachians differs
from previous ones in at least two important respects. It is centered
largely in the universities, and those conducting the studies are trained
in research. Equally important, there is a general recognition that both
sustained and well-coordinated efforts are required.
The literature of the Southern Appalachians is widely scattered.
Only one journal, Mountain Life and Work, has been devoted entirely
to the area. This journal has been able to publish but a small fraction
of even the most significant studies. The result has been that contribu-
tions of great importance are to be found in everything from the
Atlantic Monthly to Eugenics Quarterly. This scattering of the literature
has increased as scholars representing the various academic disciplines
have grown interested in the region and its problems. It is now common
to find articles on the Southern Appalachians in journals devoted to
economics, medicine, sociology, psychiatry, and history, to mention only
the most obvious. The growing interest among professional scholars has
also given rise to a great increase in the number of dissertations and
theses on the area. In short, the literature has become vast and almost
wildly diffused.
The first, and for that matter probably the last, effort to compile
a bibliography of everything ever written about the Southern Appala-
chians was undertaken by Everett E. Edwards. In 1935 he published
References on the Mountaineers of the Southern Appalachians. It ap-
peared as Number Twenty-eight in the Bibliographical Contributions
of the United States Department of Agriculture Library. Comprehen-
siveness was the goal, and no effort was made at evaluation. The work
has long stood as a landmark, and is still of vital importance to those
seriously interested in the region. Unfortunately, it is long since out
of print and now almost unobtainable.
The need for a new bibliography of the Southern Appalachians has
become increasingly evident during the past few years. The region has
become of great and growing interest to scholars. Private foundations,
governmental agencies and universities are now spending large sums
for research on the social and economic problems of the area. Several
major research projects are now being conducted; more are certain
to follow.
It is imperative that this research be carried out as efficiently and
intelligently as possible. Yet the wildly scattered nature of the literature
militates against this. Even the most conscientious scholar finds it in-
creasingly difficult to keep abreast of the literature in his own field.
It is generally quite impossible for him to follow that of other disciplines.
Thus, it is idle to expect the sociologist to scan medical journals or the
economist to master the literature of psychology. And yet, all agree that
any fruitful study of the problems of the Southern Appalachians must
utilize a cross-disciplinary approach.
The chief purpose of this work is to aid in such cross-disciplinary
research. The principal emphasis has been placed on the social sciences
and education. Geological and botanical studies, the scientific aspects
of agriculture and forestry and fictional works have been excluded, as
have references to the culturally related Ozark Mountain region. Em-
phasis has been placed on works appearing since 1935. However, titles
published prior to that date have been included if they are among the
classics of the field or if they were overlooked by Edwards. While it
often seemed best to err on the side of over-inclusion, a vast amount of
ephemeral material has been excluded. A special effort has been made
to include as many pertinent dissertations and theses as possible. Many
of these, especially theses, are almost impossible to locate through the
conventional bibliographic sources. Every effort has been made to in-
clude (1) all titles of real significance and (2) works whose bibliographies
will serve as a guide to those interested in a specific area or problem.
Whether or not to provide abstracts or annotations presented a
major problem. In many cases, they can be of undoubted value. On
the other hand, it must be recognized that historical and descriptive
accounts, unlike articles in chemistry or physics, or even psychology, do
not really lend themselves to abstracting. Unless the abstract or annota-
tion is of prohibitive length, there is danger that it may do violence to
the original. A compromise seemed the only answer. Annotations have
been provided for all entries if the title of the book or article does not
make obvious the subject covered. They have also been provided if, in
the opinion of the compiler, they would be more likely to help than
mislead the user.
All of the major and many of the smaller academic libraries in
the Southern Appalachian area were visited in an attempt to locate
unreported titles. No one library can be said to have the collection on
the Southern Appalachians. Duke and the University of North Carolina
3
have perhaps the best collections on the South in general. Each of
the state universities is strong in material relating to its particular state.
At the moment, the most comprehensive collections on the Southern
Appalachians per se appear to be located at Berea College and West
Virginia University. Berea is particularly strong in the arts, literature,
and poetry of the region; West Virginia, on the other hand, has con-
centrated on the area's history, sociology, educational and economic
problems.
Every bibliographer lives not in the fear but in the certain know-
ledge that he has overlooked titles of importance. It will be appreciated
if those discovering such omissions will notify the compiler. It is hoped
that an annual or semi-annual supplement can be produced and dis-
tributed to scholars interested in this area.
Several individuals have contributed greatly to whatever utility this
work may have. The help of Miss Lorise C. Boger and Mrs. Jack
Graybeal merit special thanks. Needless to say, all sins of omission and
commission are those of the compiler.
Abbreviations
A g
August
Ap
April
D
December
ETSC
East Tennessee State College
F
February
Ja
January
Je
June
Jl
July
ML&W
Mountain Life and Work
Mr
March
Mv
May
n'
November
o
October
PMLA
Modern Language Association, Publications
S
September
USDA
United States Department of Agriculture
VPI
Virginia Polytechnic Institute
General References
1. ARMENTROUT, WALTER W.
Employment and underemployment of rural people in the Appalachian area.
Journal of Farm Economics 41:1076-83 1959.
1A. ARMSTRONG, ANNE W.
The southern mountaineers. Yale Review 24:539-54 1935.
Analysis of mountaineer character and folkways. Author feels that Prohibi-
tion, with the opportunity to make money by moonshining, speeded the
demoralization of the mountaineers.
2. BEERS, HOWARD W.
The changing highlands. MIMV Eall 1958 5-7.
A summary of the conclusions of the 1958 annual conference of the Council
of the Southern Mountains.
3. BEERS, HOWARD W.
Highland society in transition. ML&W Spring 1946 1-3.
An analysis of the validity of the "folk society" view of the liighlanders of
Eastern Kentucky.
4. BOWMAN, ELIZABETH S.
Land of high horizons. Kingsport, Tennessee: Southern Publishers, 1938, 212p.
"My aim has been to present the Smokies as a whole with their alluring charm
rather than in full detail."
5. CALDWELL, MARY F.
Change comes to the Appalachian mountaineer. Current History 31:961-67 1930.
^ 6. CALLAHAN, NORTH
The Smoky Mountain country. New York: Duell, Sloan, & Pearce, 1952. 257p.
(American Folkways series.)
7. CAMPBELL, JOHN C.
The Southern highlander and his homeland. New York: Russell Sage Foun-
dation, 1921. 405p.
A pioneer work. Perhaps the first major study which could be described as
being of lasting importance. Bibliography 375-89.
8. COMBS, JOSIAH H.
The Kentucky liighlanders from a native mountaineers viewpoint. Lexington:
J. L. Hichardson, 1913. 44p.
9. CONFERENCE OF SOUTHERN MOUNTAIN WORKERS
The Southern Highlands; an inquiry into their needs, and qualifications desired
in church, educational and social service workers in the mountain country.
Ashville: Inland Press, 1915. 66p.
10. COUCH, W. T., editor
Culture in the south. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1934.
711p.
See especially Chapter 19 on 'Appalachian America."
11. COUNCIL OF THE SOUTHERN MOUNTAINS
Mass meeting study of the Appalachian South. (Afternoon Program ... of
the 46th Annual Conference of the Council of the Southern Mountains.) Bcrea:
The Council, 1958. 41p. proc.
12. DANIELS, FREEMAN J.
The mountain people of Virginia; their nature and their needs. Thesis. Uni-
versity of Virginia. 1925.
13. DAVIDSON, DONALD
The Tennessee. New York: Rinehart, 1946-48. vl. The old river, frontier to
secession. 333p. v2. The new river, Civil War to TVA. 377p. (Rivers of America
Series.)
14. DAVIS, D. H.
Study of the succession of human activities in the Kentucky mountains, a
dissected highland area. Journal of Geography 29:85-100 1930.
M5. DAY, JOHN F.
Bloody ground. New York: Doubleday, 1941. 324p.
A description of life in the mountain counties of eastern Kentucky. A well-
written and often penetrating account. The author is violently opposed to the
"quaintness mongers" and "ballad pushers" who have, he feels, presented a
wildly over-romanticized picture of mountain life.
15A. DUNCAN, HANNIBAL
The southern highlanders. journal of Applied Sociology 10:556-61 1926.
"The Highlanders remain a submerged group without power in state or
nation."
^16. DYKEMAN, WILMA
The French Broad. New York: Rinehart, 1955. 371p. (Rivers of America series.)
Bibliography 349-56.
17. EDWARDS, A. S. & LESLIE JONES
An experimental field of study of North Georgia mountaineers. Journal of
of Social Psychology 9:317-333 1938.
"The object of this study was to gather all information possible ... by means
of objective tests, observation, and records of behavior and language."
18. ESTABROOK, ARTHUR H.
Is there a mountain problem. ML&W Jl 1928 5-13 + .
18A. FOX, JOHN JR.
The southern mountaineer. Scribners 29:387-92, 557-70 1901.
19. GIFFIN, ROSCOE
Down in the valley. ML&W Spring 1953 39-46; Summer 1953 33-40; Autumn 1953
38-46.
A series of three articles by the Head of the Department of Sociology at Berea
College. Series is based on a socio-economic survey of an isolated school dis-
trict in the mountainous section of Kentucky.
20. GRATTAN, C. HARTLEY
Trouble in the hills. Scribncr's Magazine. 98:290-94 1935.
"The pattern of life supposed to be characteristic in the Southern It i 11 country
was established by writers of fiction." Author discusses the true situation
"which is only describablc as appalling."
21. GRAY, L. C. and others
Economic and social problems and conditions of the Southern Appalachians.
Washington: GPO, 1935. 184p. proc. (USDA Miscellaneous Publication 205.)
22. GRAY, WAYNE T.
Mountain dilemmas: a study in mountain attitudes. ML&W Ap 1936 1-7.
A discussion of the attitudes of 640 mountain families toward education, health,
religion and other socio-economic problems.
22 A. GRAYBEAL. DAVID M.
Cultural change in the Appalachian South. ML&W 35:1 6-10. 1959.
22B. GROSSMAN, D. A. AND MELVIN R. LEVIN
The Appalachion region; a preliminary analysis of economic and population
trends in an eleven state problem area. Atlanta: Council of State Governments,
1960. 31p. (Issued also by the Maryland Department of Economic Development.)
8
23. HANEY, WILLIAM H.
The Mountain people of Kentucky. Cincinnati: R. Clarke, 190G. 196p.
"It is the purpose of this book to show existing conditions in the mountains
of Kentucky and the attitude of the people of this region toward the improve-
ment of the conditions affecting life and character."
24. HARDIN, RECTOR R.
Decentralization and southern Appalachia. ML&W Spring 1946 7-9 + .
Author advances the idea that the Appalachian region may profit by the in-
dustrial decentralization made necessary by the development of the atomic bomb.
23. JOHNSON, CHARLES S.
Statistical atlas of southern counties. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina
Press, 1941. 355p.
"A listing and analysis of socio-economic indices of 1 1 0-4 southern counties."
States covered: Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana. Mary-
land, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Vir-
ginia. An invaluable source of information for the area covered. Bibliography
301-355.
2G. JONES, OLEONA
My colorful days. Boston: Chrostopher, 1940. H9p.
"Stories based on the author's experience as community worker among the
underprivileged white people of the southern Appalachians."
27. KEPHART, HORACE
Our southern highlanders. New York: Outing Publishing Co., 1913. 395p.
A popularly-written account of travels and life in the area. One of the first
important such.
28. KERNODLE, WAYNE
Last of the rugged individualists. Harpers, 220 Ja 19G0. 46-51.
A "farewell portrait" of the rapidly-vanishing mountaineer.
29. LANMAN, CHARLES
Letters from the Allegheny Mountains. New York: 1894. 198p.
Account of author's travels through northern Georgia, western North Carolina,
eastern Tennessee, and the valley of Virginia. An interesting example of an
early account of the Southern Appalachians.
s30. MASON, ROBERT L.
The lure of the Great Smokies. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company. 1927. 320p.
31. McCLURE, VIRGINIA C.
The settlement of the Kentucky Appalachian highlands. Ph.D. University of
Kentucky. 1933.
32. MARSCHNER, FRANCIS J.
Rural population density in the Southern Appalachians. Washington: GPO,
1940. 18p. USDA. Miscellaneous Publication 367).
33. MATTHEWS, MATTHEW TAYLOR
Experience worlds of mountain people. New York: Columbia University Press,
1937. 210p. (Teachers College Contributions to Education 700.)
34. MILES, EMMA B.
The spirit of the mountains. New York: J. Pott & Co., 1905. 200p.
35. MONTGOMERY, JAMES E.
Three Southern Appalachian communities; an analysis of cultural variables.
Rural Sociology 14:138-148. 1949.
36. MONTGOMERY, JAMES E.
Three Appalachian communities; cultural differences as they affect levels of
living and population pressures. Ph.D. Vanderbilt. 1944.
"The hypothesis is that the number of people who can be supported at a
given level of living upon a given initial natural resource base is affected by
cultural differentials which influence the uses that are made of these re-
sources." Communities studied were in Grundy, Cumberland and Sevier Coun-
ties, Tennessee.
37. MORLEY, MARGARET
The Carolina mountains. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1913. 397p.
An interesting if somewhat romantic account of travel throughout the area.
37A. NIXON, HERMAN C.
Lower Piedmont country. New York: Duell, Sloan & Pearce, 194G. 244p.
* 38. NIXON, HERMAN C.
Possum Trot. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1941. 192p.
An informal account of "a little neighborhood in the upcountry of the South."
39. ODUM, HOWARD W.
Southern regions of the United States. Chapel Hill: University of North Caro-
lina Press. 1936. 664p.
40. PEARSALL, MARION
Little Smoky Ridge; the natural history of a Southern Appalachian neighbor-
hood. University, Alabama: University of Alabama Press, 1959. 205p.
A description of life in the mountains of East Tennessee by a trained sociologist.
A significant contribution. Bibliography 191-205.
41. PEATTIE, RODERICK
The Great Smokies and the Blue Ridge; the story of the Southern Appa-
lachians. New York: Vanguard, 1943. 372p.
A well-written account designed for the non-specialist.
42. RAINE, JAMES W.
The land of saddle-bags. New York: Council of Women for Home Missions,
1924. 260p.
An interesting and well-written if somewhat defensive account of life in the
Southern Appalachians.
43. SEMPLE, ELLEN C.
The Anglo-Saxons of the Kentucky Mountains; a study in anthropogeography.
Geographic Journal 17:588-623 1901.
One of the first studies of the subject by a world-famous scholar.
V 44. SHEPPARD, MURIEL
Cabins in the laurel. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1935.
313p.
A popular account of the history and present conditions of the people of the
Toe River Valley area. Numerous photographs.
45. SHERMAN, MANDEL & THOMAS R. HENRY
Hollow folk. New York: Crowell, 1933. 215p.
"The material which forms the basis of this story of mountain people was
obtained from a study made during a period of two years. Two psychologists
and their assistants, a nutritionist, a psychiatrist and sociologist took part in
the investigations." Study centered in an isolated area in the Blue Ridge
Mountains of Virginia.
10
46. SPAULDING, ARTHUR W.
The men of the mountains. Nashville: Southern Publishing Co., 1915. 320p.
A highly impressionistic account of the history and present conditions plus sug-
gestions for the future. Very "pro-Mountain." "The Southern mountaineer
is, all in all, the most admirable type of American. Schooled to simplicity,
not lacking in vigor, he keeps in great degree the powers that preserve nations,
powers that too many of our people are losing in the nerve-racking strain of
our unexampled age."
47. STUART, JESSE
America's last carbon copy. Saturday Revieiv. 40 D 28, 1957 5-7 + .
"My first short stories and first four books, published from twenty to fifteen
years ago, are dated now. This is how fast life is changing for us."
48. THOMAS, JEAN
Big Sandy. New York: Holt, 1940. 302p.
"One purpose of this book is to show the mountain people as they are rather
than as romantic fiction would sometimes have them." An account of
life in the Big Sandy River district of eastern Kentucky.
49. THOMAS, JEAN
The Blue Ridge Country. New York: Duell, Sloan & Pearce, 1942, 338p. (In
the American Folkways Series.)
49A. THORNBURGH, LAURA
The Great Smoky Mountains. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press. Rev.
& enl. ed, 1956. 180p.
50. UNITED STATES CONGRESS.
Senate. Special Committee on Unemployment Problems. 86th Congress, First
Session. Hearings. 1959. Part 5: Harlan and Pikesville, Kentucky, New Orleans
and Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Part 6: Welch, Beckley, Fayetteville and Wheeling,
West Virginia.
Committee held hearings in many of the chronic labor surplus areas. The
Southern Appalachians from one of the most important of these. The Commit-
tee took much testimony from experts and residents of the area. A most impor-
tant work.
51. UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Economic and social problems and conditions of the Southern Appalachians.
Washington: GPO, 1935. 184p. USDA. Miscellaneous Publication 205.)
Contains a wealth of statistical information.
52. VANCE, RUPERT B.
Human geography of the South; a study in regional resources and human
adequacy. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1932. 596p.
53. WEATHERFORD, WILLIS D.
Pioneers of destiny; the romance of the Appalachian people. Birmingham,
Alabama: Vulcan Press, 1955. 73p.
"This small monograph is written as a part of the Centennial celebration
material of Berea College ... It is a brief outline of the movements of people,
particularly the Scotch Higlanders and the Scotch-Irish into this region . . .
54. WHEELER, LESTER R.
A study of the remote mountain people of the Tennessee Valley. Journal of
the Tennessee Academy of Science. 10:33-36. 1935.
55. WHITAKER, FESS
History of Corporal Fess Whitaker. Louisville: Standard Printing Co., 1918. 152p.
A somewhat rambling, largely autobiographical account of life in the back
country of Letcher County, Kentucky.
11
56. WHITE, EDWIN E.
Highland heritage; the southern mountains and the nation. New York: Friend-
ship Press. 1935. 193p.
A study of the southern mountains by a Presbyterian minister who served many
years in the Tennessee mountains.
57. WILSON, SAMUEL T.
The Southern mountaineers. New York: Presbyterian Home Missions, 1914. 202p.
The fourth edition (1914) incorporates in it the results of the census of 1910.
Wilson was President of Maryville College and a Presbyterian divine. Most
useful for discussion of religious and educational problems. Not, by and large,
a work showing great insight.
58. WITHINGTON, ALFREDA
Mountain doctor. Atlantic Monthly 150:257-67, 4G9-77, 768-74. 1932.
Account of Dr. Withington's work in a remote area of the Kentucky mountains.
59. WOODY, ROBERT H.
Cataloochee homecoming. South Atlantic Quarterly 49:8-17. 1950.
A protest against the tendency of government to declare people "submarginal"
and to insist "that the lot of these contented people could and should be im-
proved elsewhere." Cataloochee is a mountain hamlet in western North Caro-
lina.
12
Social and Economic Studies of Cities,
Counties and Areas
60. ADAMS, WILLIAM H. Jr.
An economic and social survey of Bedford County. Charlottesville, 1944, 84p.
(University of Virginia Record. Extension Series. XVIII No. 2.)
61. ALEXANDER, FRANK D. & ROBERT E. GALLOWAY
Salient features of social organization in a typical county of the general and
self-sufficing farm region. Rural Sociology 12:395-405 1947.
"The material for this paper was taken from a study of social organization in
Rabun County, Georgia."
f>2. ALLRED, CHARLES E. AND OTHERS
Social factors associated with land class in Overton County, Tennessee. Tennes-
see Agricultural Experiment Station. Rural Research Series. Monograph 105,
1940. 36p.
63. ALMON, GLOPPER
Origins and relation to agriculture of industrial workers in Kingsport, Tennes-
see. Journal of Faun Economics 38:828-36. 1956.
64. AVAILABILITY for employment of rural people in the Upper Monongahela
Valley, West Virginia. West Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin
391, 1956. 43p.
65. BAUDER, WARD W.
Ojectives and activities of special-interest organizations in Kentucky. Kentucky
Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 639, 1956. 43p.
66. BEERS, HOWARD W. AND CATHERINE P. HEFLIN
People and resources in eastern Kentucky. Kentucky Agricultural Experiment
Station. Bulletin 500, 1947. 59p.
67. BONSER, HOWARD J.
Better homemaking practices through rural community organizations. Tennes-
see Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 287, 1958. 25p.
Study of rural community organizations in East Tennessee.
68. BONSER, HOWARD J.
Local leadership in rural communities of Cumberland County, Tennessee.
Tennessee Agricultural Experiment Station. Rural Research Series. Mono-
graph 144, 1942. 79p.
69. BONSER, HOWARD J. & HERBERT BUTT
Selective participation of farmers and their wives in rural organization. Ten-
nessee Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 257, 1957. 23p.
A study of participation of farmers and their wives in organized groups in four
rural East Tennessee communities.
70. BORAH, LEO ARTHUR
Home folk around historic Cumberland Gap. National Geographic 84:714-68.
1943.
71. BRENDER, ERNEST V. AND ELLIOTT MERRICK
Early settlement and land use in the present Toccoa Experimental Forest.
Scientific Monthly 71:318-325. 1950.
"Story of the development, peak, decline and final abandonment of an Appa-
lachian wilderness community in the mountains of north Georgia."
72. BROOKS, WILLIAM E.
Arthurdale, a new chance. Atlantic Monthly 158:196-204. 1935.
Description of the resettlement project in Preston County, West Virginia.
13
73. BROWN, JAMES S.
Social class, intermarriage, and church membership in a Kentucky community.
American Journal of Sociology 57:232-42. 1951.
74. BRYANT, WILLIAM A.
A brief survey of industrial plants in Kingsport, Tennessee, with emphasis on
the geographic loation of the industrial worker. Thesis. ETSC. 1951.
75. BURMAN, BEN LUCIEN
That good old mountain justice. Colliers 132 Jl 25, 1953. 46-49.
Account of informal administration of justice in Kentucky mountains.
76. CATLETT, CLAY
An economic and social survey of Augusta County. Charlottesville, 1928. 168p.
(University of Virginia Record. Extension Series. XII No. 7).
77. CHASE, LEWIS I.
Changes in social and economic status of the people of Sullivan County for a
thirty year period. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1936.
78. CHRISTIANSEN, JOHN R.
Informal social participation in five Kentucky counties. Kentucky Agricultural
Experiment Station. Progress Report 43, 1956. lip. proc.
Includes two counties in the mountain area.
79. COHEN, IRWIN B. AND OTHERS.
An economic and social survey of Botetourt County. Charlottesville: University
of Virginia, School of Rural Social Economics, 1942. 170p.
80. CONNER, MAYNARD C. & WILLIAM K. BING
An economic and social survey of Patrick County. Charlottesville, 1937, 102p.
(University of Virginia Record. Extension Series. XXI No. 6).
81. CORNELL, F. D.
A social and economic survey of the Spencer soil conservation area. West Vir-
ginia Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 269, 1936. 36p.
82. DAVIDSON, DWIGHT M. AND R. L. HUMMEL
Standards of living in six Vriginia counties. Washington: Farm Security
Administration, 1940. 116p. proc. (Social Research Report No. 15).
Counties include Wythe & Rockbridge.
83. DULANEY, BEN B.
An economic and social survey of Washington County. Charlottesville, 1932,
107p. (University of Virginia Record. Extension Series. XVII No. 6).
84. EBERT, CHARLES H.
Furniture making in High Point. North Carolina Historical Revieiv 36:330-39
1959.
History of the rise of the furniture industry in the High Point, North Carolina
area.
85. EDDY, DONALD
War in Kentucky. American Magazine 148 S 1949 36-37 + .
Crime in Harlan County, Kentucky.
86. ESTABROOK, ARTHUR H.
The real mountain problem of South Carolina ML&W Ja. 1930 15-20.
A study of the "underprivileged area" of the mountains of South Carolina.
86A. FISHMAN, LEO
Employment changes in West Virginia, 1948-1958. Morgantown: West Virginia
University, 1961. 26p. (West Virginia University Business and Economic Studies
7:3).
87. FOSCUE, E. J.
Gatlinburg: a mountain community. Economic Geography 21:192-205 1945.
14
88. FRIEDMANN, JOHN R.
The spatial structure of economic development in the Tennessee Valley. Chicago:
University of Chicago, 1955. 187p. (University of Chicago. Department of
Geography. Research Paper 39).
89. GALLOWAY, Robert E.
Contrast in the rural social organization of Rabun County, Georgia and Frank-
lin County, Washington. Rural Sociology 13:384-400. 1948.
90. GALLOWAY, ROBERT E.
Rural manpower in eastern Kentucky, a study of under-employment among
rural workers in economic area eight. Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station.
Bulletin 627, 1955. 32p.
91. GALLOWAY, ROBERT E. & HOWARD W. BEERS.
Utilization of rural manpower in eastern Kentucky. Kentucky Agricultural
Experiment Station. RS-3, 1953.
92. GARNETT, WILLIAM E.
A social study of the Blacksburg Community. Virginia Agricultural Experi-
ment Station. Bulletin 299, 1935. 105p.
93. GARNETT, WILLIAM E. AND ALLEN DAVID EDWARDS
Virginia's marginal population— a study in rural poverty. Virginia Agricul-
tural Experiment Station. Bulletin 335, 1941. 166p.
94. GEISLER ADALENE
An economic study of old age pensions with special reference to seven upper
East Tennessee counties. Thesis. ETSC. 1953.
95. GIBSON, ERNEST WILLIS
The economic history of Boyd County, Kentucky. Thesis. University of Ken-
tucky. 1929.
96. GRIGSBY, S. E. & HAROLD HOFFSOMMER
Rural social organization of Frederick County, Maryland. Maryland Agricul-
tural Experiment Station. Bulletin A51, 1949.
97. GULLICK, GUY A.
Greenville County, economic and social. Columiba, S. G; University of South
Carolina, 1921. 89p. (University of South Carolina Bulletin 102).
98. HALEY, ELLIOTT C. AND OTHERS
An economic and social survey of Warren County. Charlottesville: University
of Virginia. School of Rural Social Economics, 1943. 218p.
99. HANNA, EDWIN B.
The integration of locality groups in an eastern Kentucky county. Kentucky
Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 640, 1956. 58p.
100. HANCZARYK, EDWIN W.
The labor force in West Virginia— a study of its growth and characteristics.
Morgantown: West Virginia University, 1954. 65p. (West Virginia University
Business and Economic Studies 3:4).
101. HARTMAN, VLADIMIR E.
Cultural study of a mountain community in western North Carolina. Ph.D.
University of North Carolina. 1957.
Avery County, North Carolina.
102. HAWLEY, MARION H.
Personal income in Alabama counties since 1939. University of Alabama.
Bureau of Business Research. Printed Series 25, 1959. 31p.
103. HEATH, EMILY P.
A study of the relationship existing between amount of education completed
by white & Negro heads of households in Floyd County, Georgia and certain
independent variables. Thesis. University of Georgia. 1948.
15
104. HILL, RAYMOND T.
The patterns of town sites in southern West Virginia. Proceedijigs of the West
Virginia Academy of Science 1957-58. 111-14.
Discussion of the development of the "shoestring" pattern in valley towns.
105. HOLLY, J. FRED
The economy of Greeneville, Tennessee. Knoxville: University of Tennessee.
Bureau of Research. Study No. 21, 1950. 62p.
106. HUDSON, G. DONALD
Augusta County, Virginia; a study of patterns. Ph.D. University of Chicago.
1935.
107. HUMBERT, R. L.
Industrial Survey, Bland County, Virginia. Blackshurg: VPI. Engineering
Extension Division. 1930. 56p.
108. HUMBERT, R. L.
Industrial Survey, Buchanan County, Virginia. Blacksburg: VPI. Engineering
Extension Division. 1930. 56p.
109. HUMBERT, R. L.
Industrial Survey, Carroll County, Virginia. Blacksburg: VPI. Engineering Ex-
tension Division. 1929. 56p.
110. HUMBERT, R. L.
Industrial Survey, Craig County, Virginia. Blacksburg: VPI. Engineering Ex-
tension Division. 1930. GOp.
111. HUMBERT, R. L.
Industrial Survey, Dickenson County, Virginia. Blacksburg: VPI. Engineering
Extension Division. 1930.68p.
112. HUMBERT, R. L.
Industrial Survey, Floyd County, Virginia. Blacksburg: VPI. Engineering Ex-
tension Division. 1930. 55p.
113. HUMBERT, R. L.
Industrial Survey, Giles County, Virginia. Blacksburg: VPI. Engineering Ex-
tension Division. 1929. 64p.
114. HUMBERT, R. L.
Industrial Survey, Grayson County, Virginia. Blacksburg: VPI. Engineering Ex-
tension Division. 1929. 61 p.
115. HUMBERT, R. L.
Industrial Survey, Lee County, Virginia. Blacksburg: VPI. Engineering Exten-
sion Division. 1929. 82p.
116. HUMBERT, R. L.
Industrial Survey, Montgomery County & City of Radford, Virginia. Blacks-
burg: VPI. Engineering Extension Division. 1929. 91p.
117. HUMBERT, R. L.
Industrial Survey, Pulaski County, Virginia. Blacksburg: VPI. Engineering Ex-
tension Division. 1929. 74p.
118. HUMBERT, R. L., et al.
Industrial Survey, Roanoke County, Virginia. Blacksburg: VPI. Engineering
Extension Division. 1929. 70p.
119. HUMBERT, R. L.
Industrial Survey, Russell County, Virginia. Blacksburg: VPI. Engineering Ex-
tension Division. 1930. 71 p.
120. HUMBERT R. L.
Industrial Survey, Scott County, Virginia. Blacksburg: VPI. Engineering Ex-
tension Division. 1929. 69p.
16
121. HUMBERT, R. L.
Industrial Survey, Smyth County, Virginia. Blacksburg: VPI. Engineering Ex-
tension Division. 1930. 89p.
122. HUMBERT, R. L.
Industrial Survey, Tazewell County, Virginia. Blacksburg: VPI. Engineering
Extension Division. 1930. 103p.
123. HUMBERT, R. L.
Industrial Survey, Washington County, Virginia. Blacksburg: VPI. Engineering
Extension Division. 1929. 70p.
124. HUMBERT, R. L.
Industrial Survey, Wise County, Virginia. Blacksburg: VPI. Engineering Exten-
sion Division. 1929. lOOp.
125. HUMBERT, R. L.
Industrial Survey, Wythe County, Virginia. Blacksburg: VPI. Engineering Ex-
tension Division. 1929. 72p.
126. JOHNSON, JOHN L.
Distribution of income payments to individuals in Kentucky counties by
amounts, by type, and by size, 1950. Ph.D. University of Kentucky. 1953.
127. KENNEDY, RALPH E.
An economic and social survey of Wise County. Charlottesville, 1928. 147p.
(University of Virginia Record. Extension Series. XII No. 11).
128. KENTUCKY. DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC DEVEOLPMENT
Action programs for eastern Kentucky. Erankfort, 1958. 85p.
The Eastern Kentucky Flood Rehabilitation Study. Contents: (1) Flood damage
prevention program; (2) Prerequisites to economic development; (3) Economic
development programs; (4) Regional planning program.
129. KIDD, PAUL EAKLE
Governmental assistance to industrial development in West Virginia. Thesis.
West Virginia University. 1958.
130. LANCASTER, JOHN L.
Personal income estimates for Virginia counties and cities, 1955. Charlottes-
ville: University of Virginia. Bureau of Population and Economic Research.
1958. 44p.
131. LINGER, MARGARET VIRGINIA.
French Creek community. Thesis. West Virginia University. 1934.
Study of a rural community in central West Virginia.
132. LITTLE, (ARTHUR D.) INC.
Report to State of West Virginia. Cambridge, Mass., 1955.
vl Survey of industrial development
v2 Community development program
Supplementary Report. 1955.
vl Chemicals and related processing
v2 The apparel industry
v3 Metal working industry
v4 Wood and wood products
133. LUEBKE, B. H.
Problems created by the Douglas Reservoir in East Tennessee. Journal of the
Tennessee Academy of Science 29:246-59 1954.
134. LOOMIS, CHARLES P. AND L. S. DODSON
Standards of living in four Southern Appalachian mountain counties. Wash-
ington: Farm Security Administration, 1938. 59p. proc. (Social Research Report
No. 10.)
Avery & Haywood Counties, North Carolina; Magoffin & Morgan Counties,
Kentucky.
17
135. MAYO, S. C.
Organized rural communities; a series of case studies from western North Caro-
lina. North Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station. Progress Report RS-20,
1954. 64p.
136. METZLER, W. H. AND W. F. PORTER
Employment and underemployment of rural people in the Upper Mononga-
hela Valley, West Virginia. West Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station.
Bulletin 404, 1957. 69p.
137. MILLIGAN, JACK A.
A comparison of the personal and economic characteristics of the mobile and
immobile unemployed in the Morgantown, W. Va. labor market area. Thesis.
West Virginia University. 1960.
138. MOBLEY, JOE L.
A hard look at tomorrow. MLirW. Summer 1960. 5-10.
An incisive examination of the economic and social problems of Eastern Ken-
tucky— "the area has not been self-supporting in the past thirty years."
139. MONTGOMERY, JAMES E.
Two resettlement communities on the Cumberland Plateau. Thesis. Vanderbilt
University. 1941.
140. MYERS, WILL S. AND OTHERS
Kentucky income payments by counties; 1939, 1947, 1950 and 1951. Lexington;
1953. 37p. (University of Kentucky. Bureau of Business Research. Bulletin 26).
141. NICHOLLS, WILLIAM H.
Human resources and industrial development in the Upper East Tennessee
Valley, 1900-1950. Quarterly Journal of Economics 71:289-316. 1957.
141A. NICHOLLS, WILLIAM H.
Industrial-urban development and agricultural adjustments, Tennessee Valley
and Piedmont. Journal of Political Economy 68:135-49 1960.
142. NICHOLLS, WILLIAM H.
Some foundations of economic development in the Upper East Tennessee
Valley, 1850-1900. Journal of Political Economy 64:277-302, 400-15. 1956.
143. OGLE, MILTON
In the land of the sky"s the limit. ML&W. Winter 1959 7-16.
An account of the Balsam Grove community in western North Carolina (Ashe-
ville area.) Describes the success in raising the living standards and economic
level of the area.
141. OYLER, MERTON
Community and neighborhood groupings in Knott County, Kentucky. Ken-
tucky Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 366, 1936.
145. PICKERAL, J. JULIAN & GORDON FOGG
An economic and social survey of Frederick County. Charlottesville, 1930. 142p.
(University of Virginia Record. Extension Series. XV No. 2.)
146. PORTER, WARD F.
Elk Garden, West Virginia; a reconnaissance survey of a problem town. West
Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 355-T, 1952 55p.
147. RAY, HERMAN
An economic, educational and social survey of Franklin County, Tennessee.
Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1937.
148. ROSS, MALCOLM
My neighbors hold to mountain ways. National Geographic 113:856-80 1958.
149. SCHWENDEMAN, JOSEPH R.
A study of the woodworking industry of the eastern mountains and coal field
region of Kentucky. Thesis. University of Kentucky. 1957.
18
150. SHALETT, SIDNEY
Big ear in lost valley. Saturday Evening Post Ap 9, 1960 28-29.
Describes the impact on a remote area of t he location of a great radio-astronomy
research center. Pendleton County, West Virginia.
151. SHEPPARD, MURIEL E.
Forgotten valley. South Atlantic Quarterly 33:63-82. 1934.
Description of life in a remote mountain area of North Carolina.
152. SMITH, LEE S.
Rural leadership in Roane County, Tennessee. Thesis. University of Tennessee.
1942.
153. STEVENS, G. R.
An economic and social survey of Roanoke County. Charlottesville, 1930, 130p.
(University of Virginia Record. Extension Series, XV No. 1).
154. TATE, LELAND B.
An economic and social survey of Russel County. Charlottesville, 1931. 126p.
(University of Virginia Record. Extension Series. XVI No. 1).
155. TATE, LELAND B.
Lebanon, a Virginia community. Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station.
Bulletin 352, 1943. 55p.
A socio-economic study of a county seat town in southwestern Virginia.
155A. TENNESSEE STATE PLANNING COMMISSION
Tennessee River Gorge; its scenic preservation. Nashville: the Commission, 1961.
104p. proc. (Its publication 311).
156. THOMPSON, JAMES H. AND THOMAS S. ISAACK
Factors influencing plant location in West Virginia 1945-1956. Morgantown:
West Virginia University, 1956. 24p. (West Virginia University Business and
Economic Studies 5:1).
157. THOMPSON, JAMES H.
Labor market areas for manufacturing plants in West Virginia. Morgantown:
West Virginia University, 1955. 27p. (West Virginia University Business and
Economic Studies 4:3).
158. TUNLEY, ROUL
The strange case of West Virginia Saturday Evening Post F 6, 1960. 19-20, 64-66.
"Although rich in resources and natural beauty the Mountain State suffers from
chronic, grinding poverty. A report on an American paradox."
159. UPPER EAST TENNESSEE REGIONAL PLANNING COMMISSION
Industrial site survey of Carter County, Sullivan County, Washington County.
Nashville: Tennessee State Planning Commission, 1959. 106p. (Publication 299
of the Tennnessee State Planning Commission).
160. VIRGINIA. DEPARTMENT OF CONSERVATION & DEVELOPMENT. DIVI-
SION OF INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT.
Manufacturing plants in Virginia established since 1940, listed by counties and
independent cities. Richmond, 1958. 34p.
161. WALKER, LEWIS M., JR.
An economic and social survey of Alleghany County. Charlottesville, 1936. 104p.
(University of Virginia Record. Extension Series. XX No. 7).
162. WARNER, PAUL L.
An economic and social survey of Clarke County. Charlottesville, 1925 127p.
(University of Virginia Record. Extension Series IX No. 12).
163. WEBB, GEORGE W.
The resources of the Cumberland Plateau as exemplified by Cumberland County,
Tennessee; a geographic analysis. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1956.
19
164. WEST VIRGINIA, DEPARTMENT OF EMPLOYMEN T SECURITY.
West Virginia Labor Force. Charleston 1960+.
vl:l Boone, Logan, and Mingo
vl:2 McDowell, Raleigh, and Wyoming
"A study of the manpower resources of the State of West Virginia."
165. WITZEL, WILLIAM T.
The resources and industries of the New River drainage basin in West Vir-
ginia. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1957.
166. WOOD, HARIETTE
The Kentucky Mountains, a study of four counties of southeastern Kentucky.
Thesis. University of North Carolina. 1930.
167. WOODSON, MARSHALL S.
An economic survev of Oconee County. Thesis. University of South Carolina.
1923.
168. WRITERS' PROGRAM. KENTUCKY
In the land of Breathitt. Northport, New York: Bacon, Percy & Doggett, 1941.
165p. (American Guide Series).
20
Local Government
169. BANNERMAN, ARTHUR M.
A plan of government for a southern community. Thesis. University of North
Carolina. 1940.
Study of Cherokee County, North Carolina.
170. BOSWORTH, KARL A.
Tennessee Valley country; rural government in the hill country of Alabama.
University of Alabama. Bureau of Public Administration. Publication 4, 1941.
117p.
171. COLLINS, ERNEST
Political behavior in Breathitt, Knott, Perry and Leslie counties, Kentucky.
Thesis. University of Kentucky. 1940.
172. FENTON, JOHN H.
Politics in the border states. New Orleans: Hauser, 1957. 230p.
"A study of the patterns of political organization, and political change, common
to the border states— Maryland, West Virginia, Kentucky and Missouri."
173. JARVIS, JAMES A.
Factors influencing political behavior in Bell, Clay, Knox, and Whitley Coun-
ties. Thesis. University of Kentucky. 1948.
173A. KENTUCKY LEGISLATOR
How an election was bought and sold. Harpers. 221 O 1960 33-38.
Discussion of corrupt political practices in a county in the eastern Kentucky
coal fields.
174. NICKS, ROY S.
City-county separation in Tennessee; a case study of Kingsport and Sullivan
County. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1957.
175. REEVES, JOHN E.
Population trends and other factors influencing the voting habits of the Cum-
berland Valley region of Southeastern Kentucky. Thesis. University of Ken-
tucky. 1938.
176. RHYME, EDWIN
Political leaership and social structure in a rural county. Thesis. University of
North Carolina. 1950.
177. ROGERS, KATHERINE V.
A description of county government in Gordon, Clarke, ami Paulding counties,
Georgia. Thesis. University of Georgia. 1941.
178. STRADLEY, WILLIAM B.
A study of local sources of support of local government agencies in 23 selected
Tennessee counties. Ed.D. University of Tennessee. 1958.
179. TENNESSEE TAXPAYERS ASSOCIATION
A report of the survey of the finances and management of the government of
Knox County. 1934. 124p.
180. TENNESSEE TAXPAYERS ASSOCIATION
A report of the survey of the finances and management of the government of
Washington County. 1934. 103p.
181. VAN ARK, CARROLL
Women rule a Cumberland town. Colliers 110 N 7, 1942 58-59. Spencer, Tennes-
see, elects a full slate of women officials.
21
Family Life, Children
182. ANDERSON, FRANCES GAINES
Leisure time interests and activities of girls in high school. (Charleston,
W. Va.). Thesis. West Virginia University. 1942.
183. BAUDER, WARD W.
Characteristics of families on small farms. Kentucky Agricultural Experiment
Station. Bulletin 644, 1956. 46p.
Includes data on size of family unit, education, mobility, income, etc. Magoffin &
Powell counties are among those studied.
184. BESHEARS, RALPH L.
A descriptive study of juvenile delinquency in selected counties in the State
of North Carolina. Thesis. Appalachian State Teachers College. 1958.
185. BLISS, RUSSELL L.
Teenage dating behavior in two eastern Kentucky high schools. Thesis. Uni-
versity of Kentucky. 1957.
186. BOYD, VIRLYN A.
Household and family composition in selected rural areas of eleven Kentucky
counties. Thesis. University of Kentucky. 1948.
Eight of the counties studied are in the Southern Appalachian area.
187. BRIGHT, MILDRED
Harlan County organizes for youth welfare. School and Society 55:588-90 1942.
Discussion of annual county-wide Youth Guidance Institute.
188. BROWN, BARBARA
Needs and interests in family relationships of a selected group of West Vir-
ginia eighth and ninth grade pupils, 1948-1949. Thesis. West Virginia Uni-
versity. 1949.
189. BROWN, JAMES S.
Conjugal family and the extended family group. American Sociological Review
17:297-306 1952.
Locus is Beech Creek, an isolated neighborhood in the Kentucky mountains.
190. BROWN, JAMES S.
The family group in a Kentucky mountain farming community. Kentucky Agri-
cultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 588, 1958. 38p.
191. BROWN, JAMES S.
The farm family in a Kentucky mountain neighborhood. Kentucky Agricultural
Experiment Station. Bulletin 587, 1952. 42p.
192. BROWN, JAMES S.
The social organization of an isolated Kentucky mountain neighborhood. Ph.D.
Harvard University. 1950.
"This is a study of the social organization of Beech Creek, an isolated neighbor-
hood of thirty-eight families in the mountains of Kentucky." Detailed study
of daily life and social relationships.
193. CLOPPER, EDWARD N.
Child welfare in Kentucky. New York: National Child Labor Committee, 1919.
322p.
Includes material on the mountain counties.
194. DAY, D. L.
Impact of World War II on juvenile delinquency in Knox County, Tennessee.
Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1948.
22
195. FARR, T. J.
Tennessee folk beliefs concerning children. Journal of American Folklore.
52:112-16. 1939.
"Folk beliefs of Tennessee, especially of the remote mountain sections."
196. GARNETT, WILLIAM E.
Virginia rural youth adjustments. Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station.
Bulletin 405, 1947. 80p.
Contains much useful statistical information by counties.
197. HAHN, WILLIAM PARSONS
The leisure time activities and interests of the boys of Spencer High School.
Thesis. West Virginia University. 1939.
198. HAM, TOM
Close-up of a hillbilly family. A nit) Iran Mercury 52:659-65 1941.
Account of the way of life of the Long family in the north Georgia hills.
199. HAMILTON, C. HORACE.
Recent changes in the social and economic status of farm families in North
Carolina. North Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 309, 1937.
180p.
200. HICKEY, MARGARET
Forgotten children; miracle of Pilot Knob. Ladies Home Journal Ja 1918 23-24.
Pilot Knob is a provery-stricken community in East Tennessee. Decribes the
way of life & work of the Save the Children Federation to improve conditions.
201. HINES, JAMES
Portrait of a hill-billy. America)} Mercury. Ap 1952 49-57.
Describes the way of life of Ike Snoddy; a "poor white" resident of the Ken-
tucky mountains.
202. HITCH, MARGARET A.
Life in the Blue Ridge Hollow. Journal of Geography 30:309-322. 1931.
An account of life in an isolated mountain area of western Virginia.
203. HYLAND, THOMAS S.
Fruitful mountaineers. Life. D 26, 1949 60-67.
Discussion of the high birth rate and large families typical of the mountain
regions. Leslie County, Kentucky is featured.
203A. KANAWHA WELE\RE COUNCIL
Our troubled children. Charleston, 1957. 73p. proc.
A study of juvenile delinquency in Kanawha County, West Virginia.
204. LEWIS CLAUDIA
Children of the Cumberland. New York: Columbia University Press, 1946. 217p.
"This is a book about a group of children in the Southern mountains."
205. MILLER, NORA
Girl in the rural family. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1935.
108p.
Chapter 3: The mountain farm family.
Chapter 4: The soft coal mine family.
206. MOWBRAY, A/TLEE H.
Development of adoption practices in East Tennessee. Thesis. ETSC. 1953.
207. QUARLES, MARY ANN
A comparison of some aspects of family life between two areas of Leslie Coun-
ty, Kentucky. Thesis. University of Kentucky. 1952.
208. REYNOLDS, ROY LEE
A studv of parent-child relationships in Greene Countv, Tennessee. Thesis.
ETSC. 1951.
23
209. ROBERTS, LEONARD W.
Up Cutshin and down Greasy. Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, 1959.
165p.
The author spent some years in learning and recording the folkways of the
Couch Family. The family has lived for several generations in a remote section
of the mountains of Eastern Kentucky. Informal narrative account.
210. ROPER, ROSALIE
An analysis of youth centers for white youth in three Tennessee cities: John-
son Gity, Elizabethton, and Kingsport. Thesis. ETSC. 1958.
211. SCHMITT, LEONARD R.
Recreational habits of rural youth in selected communities of Hamilton Coun-
ty, Tennessee. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1949.
212. SHERMAN, MANDEL
The development of attitudes. A study of the attitudes of mountain children.
New York: Payne Fund, 1933. 54p.
213. SIZER, LEONARD M. AND OTHERS
The learning experiences of youth groups; a study of 4-H clubs in Barbour
County, W. Va. West Virginia University Agricultural Experiment Station.
Bulletin 427, 1959. 31p.
214. SOLLENBERGER, RICHARD T.
The response of isolated mountain children to unusual stimuli. Thesis. Uni-
versity of Virginia. 1933.
215. WILLIAMS, FAITH AND OTHERS
Family living in Knott County, Kentucky. Washington: GPO, 1937, 68p. (USDA.
Technical Bulletin 576).
216. YOUMANS, E. GRANT
The educational attainment and future plans of Kentucky rural youths. Ken-
tucky Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 664, 1959. 46p.
A study of the role of socio-economic origins in the educational attainment and
aspirations of rural youth. Elliott County in the eastern mountains is one of
the three counties studied.
217. ZIMMERMAN, CARLE C.
Family and society; a study of the sociology of reconstruction. New York: Van
Nostrand, 1935. 61 lp.
Contains a detailed description and analysis of the "Highlander." Study based
on data gathered in the Arkansas Ozarks. However, it is of importance to those
interested in similar areas of the Southern Appalachians.
24
Measurements of Intelligence and Aptitude
218. ASHER, E. J.
Inadequacy of current intelligence tests for testing Kentucky mountain children.
Pedagogical Seminary 46:480-86 1935.
"The differences in the social and material environment of Kentucky moun-
tain children and children in urban communities are such that intelligence
tests standardized on urban children are not adequate for measuring the kind
or amount of intelligence of Kentucky mountain children."
21 8A. DRAKE, CHARLES
Migration myths. MLirW Winter 1960 43-45; Spring 1961 9-13 + .
An examination of the various theories advanced to explain the low IQ's of
migrant groups. Author concludes that "migrant children have an intelligence
potential not unlike the established population, and that eventually, under
favorable circumstances, they can achieve at a normal level."
219. HERNDON, C. NASH
Intelligence in family groups in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Eugenics Quarter-
ly 1:53-57 1954.
The 223 individuals tested had a mean 1Q score of 94.52.
220. HIRSCH, NATHANIEL
An experimental study of the cast Kentucky mountaineers; a study in heredity
and environment. Genetic Psychology Monograph 3:189-244. 1928.
221. HIRSCH, NATHANIEL
A summary of some of the results from an experimental study of the east
Kentucky mountaineers. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science.
13:18-21 1927.
Summary of intelligence tests given to 1,945 young people.
222. JONES, LESLIE
An experimental and field study of north Georgia mountaineers. Thesis. Uni-
versity of Georgia. 1934.
223. MANNE, JACK
Mental deficiency in a closely inbred mountain clan. Mental Hygiene 20:269-79.
1936.
Locus: Virginia mountains.
224. SHERMAN, MANDEL AND CORA B. KEY
The intelligence of isolated mountain children. Child Development 3:279-90.
1932.
"The young children of the various hollows do not differ greatly in intelligence,
whereas great differences are found between the older children."
The communities studied were located approximately 100 miles west of Wash-
ington, D.G., in the Blue Ridge Mountains.
225. WHEELER, LESTER R.
Comparative study of the intelligence of east Tennessee mountain children.
Journal of Educational Psychology 33:321-34 1942.
"The average mountain child has gained ten points in IQ, or nearly one point
a year during the past ten years."
226. WHEELER, LESTER R.
The intelligence of east Tennessee mountain children. Journal of Educational
Psychology 23:351-370 1932.
"The median IQ of mountain children seems to be near normal at age six
but shows a fairly consistent decrease in intelligence with an increase in
chronological age."
25
227. WHEELER, LESTER R. AND V. D. WHEELER
The musical ability of mountain children as measured by the Seashore Test
of musical talent, journal of Genetic Psychology 43:352-376. 1933.
"The musical talent of East Tennessee mountain children, as measured by the
Seashore Tests, compares favorable with that of other unselected groups in
various sections of the country."
2G
Public Health, Nutrition
228. AKERS, CARMEN EUGENE
Tuberculosis in eastern Kentucky. Thesis. University of Kentucky. 1951.
229. BACON, H. STUART AND R. W. JESSEE
Immunization cooperation in southwest Virginia. Berea: Council of the Southern
Mountains, 1959. 16p. proc.
A study of the reactions of residents of three SW Virginia counties to immuni-
zation programs. Relates socio-economic factors to cooperation.
230. BARNARD, EUNICE F.
Food joins the three R's. Survey Graphic 32:428-31 1943.
Describes efforts to improve the diets of children in the Kentucky hill country
by working through the public schools.
231. BEEBE, GILBERT W.
Contraception and fertility in the Southern Appalachians. Baltimore: Williams
& Wilkins, 1942. 274p.
"The study comes to a focus upon the population of the southern Appalachians,
especially the residents of the coal plateaus. The empirical observations concern
a sample of thirteen hundred families in Logan County, West Virginia."
232. BEEBE, GILBERT W. AND M. A. GEISLER
Control of conception in a selected rural sample. Human Biology 14:1 1942 1-20.
233. BELCHER, JOHN C. AND DONALD G. HAY
Use of health care services and enrollment in voluntary health insurance in
Habersham County, Georgia, 1957. Georgia Agricultural Experiment Station.
Bulletin N.S. 73, 1960. 19p.
234. BLAND, MARION FRANCES
Supersititions about food and health among Negro girls in elementary and
secondary schools in Marion County, West Virginia. Thesis. West Virginia Uni-
versity. 1950.
235. BRADLEY, FRANCES S.
The redemption of Appalachia. Hygiea 9:26-30 1931.
"The gradual conversion of the mountaineers to the gospel of public health."
235A. BRECKENRIDGE, MARY
Wide neighborhoods. New York: Harpers, 1952. 266p.
Description of the Frontier Nursing Service.
236. CHALMERS, F. W. AND OTHERS
Nutritional status studies in Monongalia County, West Virginia. West Virginia
Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 375, 1955.
237. CHRISTIANSEN JOHN R. AND THOMAS R. FORD
Trends in the number and distribution of medical doctors in Kentucky. Ken-
tucky Agricultural Experiment Station. Progress Report 69, 1958. 22p.
238. COOK, RUTH ELIZABETH
Food habits of a selected group of pupils in the Wellsburg High School, Wells-
burg, West Virginia. Thesis. West Virginia University. 1951.
239. CUNNINGHAM, ADDIE J.
What progress in health has been made among the Negro youths of the
elementary school age for the past ten years in Talladega County, Alabama.
Thesis. Alabama State College. 1952.
240. GARDNER, CAROLINE
Clever Country: Kentucky mountain trails. New York: Revell, 1931 159p.
"A story revealing the purpose of the Frontier Nursing Service."
27
241. GILLIAM, LENA
A contraceptive service for mountain women. Journal of Contraception 3:56-59.
1938.
242. HALE, NATHAN SCOTT
A nutrition survey of some eleventh grade students in Washington County,
Tennessee. Thesis. ETSC. 1957.
243. HAMILTON, C. HORACE
Health and health services in the Southern Appalachians. North Carolina Agri-
cultural Experiment Station. Progress Report RS-35, 1959. 105p.
244. HARVEY, K. F.
A descriptive study of patients accepted for service during a three-month
period at Psychiatric Service Clinic in Norton, Virginia. Thesis. University of
Tennessee. 1956.
245. HAY, DONALD AND C. H. HAMILTON
Acceptance of voluntary health insurance in four rural communities of Hay-
wood County, N.C. North Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station. Progress
Report RS 24, 1954. 53p.
246. JUSTICE, DEWEY J.
A study of the opinions of the various classes of people to Pike County's medical
facilities. Thesis. University of Kentucky. 1958.
247. MARTIN, ROXIE
Old remedies collected in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Journal American Folklore.
60:184-85 1947.
248. MASON, MARIE
Rural family health in a selected county in Kentucky. Kentucky Agricultural
Experiment Station. Bulletin 538, 1949. 46p.
Powell County. Appeared in 1948 as a thesis at the University of Kentucky.
249. NICOLA, BLANCHE
Data from physical examinations. ML&W 0. 1930 10-13.
Comparison of weight, height, etc., of women students at Berea College witli
those at Barnard College.
249A. PEARSALL, MARION
Healthways in a mountain county. ML&W Winter 1960 7-13.
Both "folk" and modern medical practices and care exist in Leslie County, Ken-
tucky.
250. POOLE, ERNEST
Nurses on horseback. New York: Macmillan, 1932. 168p.
An account of the operations of the Frontier Nursing Service in the Kentucky
mountains.
251. ROBERTS, LYDIA J.
The nutrition and care of children in a mountain county of Kentucky. U. S.
Department of Labor. Children's Btueau. Publication 110, (1922). 41p.
252. SLOOP, MARY T.
Miracle in the hills. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1953. 232p.
"A very personal story of Dr. Mary Sloop and her husband . . . covering more
than forty years in the North Carolina Mountains."
253. TATE, LELAND B.
The health and medical-care situation in rural Virginia. Virginia Agricultural
Experiment Station. Bulletin 363, 1944. 51p.
254. TIFFANY, E. L.
Selling health in the mountains. Public Health Nursing 31:89-92 1939.
28
255. TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE. RURAL LIFE COUNCIL
Health care services and facilities in the Southern Appalachian region. 1955.
30p.
256. WHARTON, MAY C.
Doctor woman of the Cumberlands. Pleasant Hills, Tennessee, 1953. 208p.
257. WHEELER, LESTER R.
Changes in the dietary habits of remote mountain people since 1900. Journal
of the Tennessee Academy of Sciences. 10:167-174 1935.
258. WHEELER, LESTER R.
A comparative study of the physical status of East Tennessee mountain children.
Human Biology 5:706-21 1933.
259. WHITMAN, ROBERT H.
Development of the health program for Negroes in Franklin County, Ten-
nessee from 1940 to 1953. Thesis. Tennessee Agricultural and Industrial Uni-
versity. 1953.
260. WHITEMAN, RUTH H.
Food habits of a sample of University High School pupils. Thesis. West Virginia
University. 1952.
261. WIGGINS, TIMOTHY
Daughter knows best . . . sometimes. ML&W. Winter 1959 31-34.
A short play on the subject of diabetes written especially for adults with limited
reading ability.
262. WILLEFORD, MARY B.
Income and health in remote rural areas; a study of 400 families in Leslie
County, Kentucky. Ph.D. Columbia University. 1932.
Periodicals
263. FRONTIER NURSING SERVICE.
Quarterly Bulletin. Lexington, Kentucky. 1925 + .
Devoted to the work of the Frontier Nursing Service. Many issues contain articles
of interest to the sociologist, folklorist and general student of the region.
29
The Mountaineer in the City
264. AKERS, ELMER
Southern whites in Detroit. Ann Arbor, 1936(?). 83p. Typescript.
Study of the difficulty experienced by southern whites in adapting to indus-
trial and urban life.
265. BEERS, HOWARD W. AND CATHERINE HEFLIN
Rural people in the city; a study of the socio-economic status of 297 families in
Lexington, Kentucky. Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 478.
1945. 19p.
266. BEERS, HOWARD W. AND CATHERINE HEFLIN
The urban status of rural migrants. Social Forces 23:32-37 1944.
Study of farm-reared residents of Lexington, Kentucky.
267. BEYNON, ERDMANN
The southern white laborer migrates to Michigan. American Sociological Review
3:333-43 1938.
268. BUCHANAN, MARGARET T.
The migration of workers from Tennessee to Michigan. Thesis. Yanderbilt Uni-
versity. 1940.
269. CALDWELL, MORRIS G.
Adjustments of mountain families in an urban environment. Social Forces
16:389-95 1938.
"Sample consists of 57 mountain families from 26 mountain counties in eastern
and southeastern Kentucky, who have moved to Lexington, Kentucky."
270. CINCINNATI. MAYOR'S FRIENDLY RELATIONS COMMITTEE
Report of a workshop on the southern mountaineers in Cincinnati. Ap 29, 1954.
48p. proc.
Ppl-14 consist of " edited transcript of comments by Dr. Roscoe Giffin."
271. COLLINS, WILLIAM
From the freedom of the mountains to the hurly-burly city. nd. 8p.
A reprint in pamphlet form of a series of articles in the Cincinnati Inquirer on
the problems of the southern migrant in Cincinnati.
272. DAVIS, D. H.
Urban development in the Kentucky mountains. Association American Geo-
graphers. Annals 15:92-99 1915.
273. FREEDMAN, RONALD
Recent migration into Chicago. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1950. 222p.
274. GIFFIN, ROSCOE
From Cinder Hollow to Cincinnati. ML&W 32:4 1956 11-20.
275. GIFFIN, ROSCOE
Newcomers from the Southern Mountains. In Institute on Cultural Patterns of
Newcomers. Chicago: Welfare Council of Metropolitan Chicago, 1957. pp 15-40.
Commentary based on an analytical tabulation of major characteristics of
southern mountain culture, of urban life, of responses of newcomers from the
mountains to the city, and some suggested ways of coping with the responses.
276. HEFLIN, CATHERINE P.
Socio-economic adjustments of rural migrants in Lexington. Thesis. University
of Kentucky. 1944.
277. HEFLIN, CATHERINE P. AND HOWARD W. BEERS
Urban adjustments of rural migrants; a study of 297 families in Lexington,
Kentucky, 1942. Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 487, 1946.
32p.
30
Library
278. HUNDLEY, JOHN R.
The mountain man in northern industry. ML&W 31:2 1955 33-38.
A discussion, from the employers viewpoint, of the problems of adjustment
facing workers from the Appalachian region who seek employment in northern
industry. The author is Director of Industrial Relations and Personnel at the
Granite City Steel Co.
279. KILLIAN, LEWIS M.
The adjustment of southern white migrants to northern urban norms. Social
Forces 32:66-9 1953.
280. KILLIAN, LEWIS M.
The effects of southern white workers on race relations in northern plants.
American Sociological Review 17:327-31 1952.
"The southern whites studied were members of many small 'clusters' of mi-
grants concentrated in . . . the near west side of Chicago."
281. KILLIAN, LEWIS M.
Southern white laborers in Chicago's West Side. Ph.D. University of Chicago.
1949.
282. LEYBOURNE, G. C.
Urban adjustments of migrants from Southern Appalachian plateaus. Social
Forces 16:238-46 1937.
Study made in Cincinnati.
283. MAXWELL, JAMES A.
Down from the hills and into the slums. Reporter D 13, 1956 27-29.
Problems of migrant mountaineers in urban industrial areas of the Midwest.
283 A. MYERS, JAMES
The mountaineer in industry. ML&W Jl 1930 7-13.
284. SLOTKIN, JAMES S.
From field to factory; new industrial employees. Glencoe, Illinois: Free Press,
1960. 156p.
A wide-ranging study of the acculturation process among new industrial em-
ployees recruited from "backward" areas. A factory near Chicago employing
whites from the Southern Appalachians was studied.
285. SMITH, ELDON D.
Migration and adjustment experiences of rural migrant workers in Indianapolis.
Ph.D. University of Wisconsin. 1953.
Much material on the job satisfactions of southern mountaineers.
286. VOTAW, ALBERT N.
Hillbillies invade Chicago. Harpers 216 F. 1958 61-67.
"The city's toughest integration problem has nothing to do with Negroes. It
involves a small army of white, Protestant, Early American migrants from the
south— who are usually proud, poor, primitive, and fast with a knife."
31
Population Changes, Migration
287. BEERS, HOWARD W.
Effects of war on farm population in Kentucky. Kentucky Agricultural Experi-
ment Station. Bulletin 456, 1944. 24p.
288. BEERS, HOWARD W.
Growth of population in Kentucky, 1860-1940. Kentucky Agricultural Experi-
ment Station. Bulletin 422, 1942. 24p.
289. BEERS, HOWARD W.
Mobility of rural population. Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin
505, 1947. 43p.
"Study of changes in residence and occupation in two types of rural communi-
ties." Johnson and Robertson counties.
290. BREAZEALE, NORMA J.
Association of selected socio-economic characteristics with net migration from
three Kentucky economic areas, 1920-1950. Thesis. University of Kentucky. 1958.
Two of the areas are in the Southern Appalachian area.
291. BROWN, JAMES S.
Basic population data for the Southern Appalachians, by state, economic area
and metropolitan area. Lexington: University of Kentucky Social Research
Service, 1958. 65p.
292. BROWN, JAMES S.
The changing Highlands population. ML&W. Spring 1953. 42-43.
293. BROWN, JAMES S. AND RALPH J. RAMSEY
The changing Kentucky population; a summary of population data for coun-
ties. Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station. Progress Report 67, 1958. 74p.
Includes much valuable data on population, migration, education, religion, etc.
294. BROWN, JAMES S. AND HOWARD W. BEERS
Rural population changes in five Kentucky mountain districts, 1943 to 1946.
Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 532, 1949. 46p.
295. CLEVINGER, WOODROW R.
Southern Appalachian Highlanders in western Washington. Pacific Northivest
Quarterly 33:3-25 1942.
"Approximately 15,000 western Washington mountaineers are immigrants or
the Washington-born children of immigrants from the southern Appalachian
region." Lists "families and clans" prominent in the migrations.
296. COMBS, JERRY W.
Population migration in the State of Tennessee. Thesis. University of Tennessee.
1948.
297. DANLEY, ROBERT A.
Population estimates for Kentucky counties and economic areas, July 1, 1958.
Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station. Progress Report 79, 1959. 17p.
Progress Report 66 presents the same information as of July 1, 1957.
298. DODSON, L. S.
Living conditions and population migration in four Appalachian counties.
Washington: Farm Security Administration, 1937. 152p. (Social Research Re-
port No. 3).
Counties are: Avery & Haywood Counties. North Carolina; Magoffin & Morgan
Counties, Kentucky.
299. GARNER, ALTO L.
Migration of notables to and from the Southeast. Ed.D. University of Ken-
tucky. 1954.
"A notable being defined as one listed in Who's IV ho in America 1952-53."
32
300. GRAY, W. T.
Population movements in the Kentucky mountains, Rural Sociology 10:380-386
1945.
301. HANNA, MARGARET
The drain of talent out of Georgia and South Carolina. Thesis. Rent State Uni-
versity. 1957.
Who's Who In America served as a base for this study. Not broken down by
county.
302. HARRIS, GEORGE E.
The drain of talent out of Ohio and Kentucky. Thesis. Kent State University.
1956.
Who's Who In America served as a base for this study. Not broken down by
county.
303. HEBERLE, RUDOLF
The impact of the war on population redistribution in the South. Vanderbilt
University. Institute of Research & Training in the Social Sciences. Paper No. 7,
1945. 64p.
"While the whole southeast is the subject of the study, the more detailed
analysis will be limited to five states: Louisiana, Arkansas, Mississippi, Tennessee,
and Alabama."
304. HITT, HOMER L.
Migration between the South and other regions, 1949 to 1950. Social Forces
36:9-16 1957.
305. HITT, HOMER L.
Population movements in the southern United States. Scientific Monthly 82:241-46
My. 1956.
305A. HUTCHISON, ROBERT S.
Migration and industrial development in Tennessee. Nashville: Tennessee
Legislative Council, 1958. 292p. proc.
A report to the Industrial Development and Migration Subcommittee of the
Tennessee Legislative Council. The report contains much useful statistical
information. There are breakdowns by county and economic areas.
306. JOHNSON, RAYBURN
Population trends in Tennessee from 1940 to 1950. Tennessee Historical
Quarterly 11:254-62 1952.
307. KNICELY, HOWARD
Characteristics of mobile workers in a rural industrialized community. Thesis.
University of West Virginia. 1960.
Study of workers attracted to the Ravenswood, W. Va. area by the establish-
ment of new plants.
308. LAING, JAMES T.
The drain of talent out of the Virginias. Proceedings of the West Virginia Aca.
demy of Science XII (1938) 132-36.
Based on Who's Who in America. Not divided by county.
309. LAING, JAMES T.
A further note on the drain of talent out of the Virginias. Proceedings of the
West Virginia Academy of Science XIII (1939) 92-96.
310. LARSON, O. F.
Wartime migration and the manpower reserve on farms in eastern Kentucky.
Rural Sociology 8:141-61 1943.
311. LUEBKE, B. H. AND JOHN F. HART
Migration from a Southern Appalachian community. Land Economics 34:44-53.
1958.
Study made in Jefferson County, Tennessee.
33
312. MANGRUM, CLAUDE THOMAS, Jr.
The drain of talent out of North Carolina and Tennessee. Thesis. Kent State
University. 1958.
Who's Who In America served as the basis for this study. Not broken down by
country.
313. MARSCHNER, FRANCIS J.
Rural population density in the Southern Appalachians. Washington: GOP,
1940. 18p. (USDA Miscellaneous Publication 367).
314. MASON, MARIE AND C. PAUL MARSH
Migration within Kentucky. Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin
620, 1954. 23p.
315. MAULDIN, W. PARKER
Selective migration from small towns. American Sociological Revieiv 5:748-58
1940.
316. MOSS, J. JOEL
West Virginia and her population. West Virginia Agricultural Experiment
Station. Bulletin 403, 1957. 51p.
317. OYLER, MERTON D.
Fertility rates and migration of Kentucky population, 1920-1940, as related to
communication, income and education. Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Sta-
tion. Bulletin 469, 1944. 43p.
By county.
318. OYLER, MERTON D.
Neighborhood standing and population changes in Johnson and Robertson
Counties, Kentucky. Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 523,
1948. 48p.
319. OLYER, MERTON D.
Natural increase and migration of Kentucky population, 1920-1935. Kentucky
Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 395, 1939.
320. PITCHER, JUNE DICKERSON
Occupational status and reasons for leaving the state of West Virginia: gradu-
ates of Division of Home Economics, West Virginia University, 1932-1952.
Thesis. West Virginia University. 1955.
321. SIZER, LEONARD M.
Population changes in West Virginia, 1900-1950. West Virginia Agricultural
Experiment Station. Bulletin 401, 1957. 8 p.
322. SMITH, ELDON D.
Nonfarm employment information for rural people. Journal of Farm Economics
38:813-27 1956.
A study of the sources of job information among migrant workers in Indiana-
polis. Southern whites (largely from Kentucky and Tennessee) had poor sources
of information.
323. SOMERS, GERALD G.
Mobility of chemical workers in a coal mining area. Morgantown: West Virginia
University, 1954. 41p. (West Virginia University Business and Economic Studies
3:2).
Study based on "a survey of the work histories, from 1940 to 1952, of 1,015
employees of a chemical manufacturing plant in Monongalia."
324. SPAULDING, IRVING A. AND HOWARD W. BEERS
Mobility and fertility rates of rural families in Robertson and Johnson Coun-
ties, Kentucky, 1918-1941. Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin
451, 1943. 20 p.
325. STODTBECK, FRED
Migration from Kentucky; a study of intervening opportunities. Thesis. Indiana
University. 1942.
34
326. STURGIS, DUDLEY C.
Standard of living and migration of 136 hum families in Overton County, Ten-
nessee. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1936.
327. U. S. CONGRESS. HOUSE
Select Committee to Investigate the Interstate Migration of Destitute Citizens.
Washington: GOP, 1940-41. 10 volumes.
An exhaustive study of the subject. No one volume is devoted entirely to
migration from the Southern Appalachians. However, parts 2 (Montgomery)
and 3 (Chicago) contain much of value. Index for the whole in Part 10.
328. WILLIAMS, ROBIN M. AND HOWARD W. BEERS
Attitudes toward rural migration and family life in Johnson and Robertson
Counties, Kentucky, 1941. Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin
452, 1943. 40p.
35
Coal Mines and Miners
lUIU.ICX.RAPHY
329. WADLEIGH, FRANCIS R.
A list of books and other sources of information regarding coal and coal pro-
ducts. Washington: W. F. Roberts, 1935. 63p.
References in English on all aspects of coal-technology, economics, labor rela-
tions, etc.
GENERAL STUDIES AND HISTORY
330. CHAPMAN, MARY L.
The influence of coal in the Big Sandy Valley. Ph.D. University of Kentucky,
1945.
331. CONLEY, PHIL
History of the West Virginia coal industry. Charleston: Educational Foundation,
1960. 3 lip.
Bibliography pp297-308.
332. ERNST, HARRY W. AND CHARLES DRAKE
Poor, proud and primitive. Nation, 188:490-93. 1959.
Deals largely with the depressed coal areas of southern West Virginia. (Re-
printed in ML&W 35:3 1959, under the title: Region in need).
333. FRISCH, ISADORE
Twentieth century development of the coal mining industry in eastern Kentucky
and its influence upon political behavior of the area. Thesis. LUiiversity of Ken-
tucky. 1938.
224. GRIFFIN, GERALD
The truth about eastern Kentucky. ML&W 31:4 1955 17-24.
A discussion of the economic and social conditions in the coal fields of eastern
Kentucky.
335. JILLISON, WILLARD R.
The coal industry in Kentucky. Frankfort, 1924. 164p.
(Kentucky Geological Survey. Geologic Reports v20).
Contains much information on mining history, statistics, lists of coal companies,
etc.
33G. MORRIS, HOMER L.
The plight of the bituminous coal miner. Philadelphia: University of Penn-
sylvania Press, 1934. 253p.
Study is centered chiefly in the coal fields of Kentucky and West Virginia.
337. MORY, SAMUEL A.
History of coal mining in Laurel County, Kentucky, 1750 to 1944. London, Ky.:
Sentinel-Echo, 1944. 16p.
338. PEARCE, ALBERT
The growth and development of the Kentucky coal industry. Thesis. University
of Kentucky. 1930.
339. ROSS, MALCOLM H.
Machine age in the hills. New York: Macmillan, 1933. 248p.
"The effects of technology ... in the coal fields of Kentucky and West Virginia."
340. VERHOEFF, MARY
The Kentucky mountains, transportation and commerce, 1750-1911; a study in
the economic history of a coal field. Louisville: Filson Club, 1911. 208p. (Filson
Club Publication 26).
36
341. WHITE, ELIZABETH
Development of the bituminous coal mining industry in Logan County, West
Virginia. Thesis. Marshall College. 1956.
HEALTH-PHYSICAL AND MENTAL
342. BEEBE, GILBERT W.
Differential fertility by color for coal miners in Logan County, West Virginia.
Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly 19:189-95 1941.
343. BUREAU OF COOPERATIVE MEDICINE
Medical care in selected areas of the Appalachian bituminous coal fields. New
York: The Bureau, 1939. 55p.
Conference on Medical Care in the Bituminous Coal area.
1st.- 1952-
First bears the title: Medical-hospital problems in the bituminous coal min-
ing areas. Chicago: American Medical Association, 1953. 26p. (Appeared also in
the JAMA 151:407-12 1953).
Second bears the title: Report of the second Conference on medical care in the
bituminous coal mine area. Chicago: American Medical Association, 1953. 28p.
344. DRAPER, WARREN F.
A hospital network for coal miners and their families. West Virginia Medical
Journal 56:70-73 1960.
Description of some of the medical problems encountered in the West Virginia-
Tennessee-Kentucky coal tields.
345. FIELD, LEWIS AND OTHERS
Observations on the relation of psychological factors to psychiatric illness among
coal miners. International Journal of Social Psychiatry 3:133-145 1957.
The authors are staff members of the Bluefieid, (West Virginia) Mental Health
Center. A discussion of the "trapped, hopeless life situation" of the miner.
346. KING, JAMES B. AND OTHERS.
The bituminous coal country; a psychiatric frontier. Mental Health in Virginia.
10:38-40 1959.
Essentially the same information as that presented by the same authors in the
West Virginia Medical Journal 55:164-67 1959.
347. McGILL, NETTIE P.
Welfare of children in the bituminous coal mining communities in West Vir-
ginia. Washington: GPO, 1923. 77p. (Children's Bureau Publication 117).
348. MASSIE, WILLIAM A.
Medical services for rural areas. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1957. 68p.
Results of a study conducted by the Tennessee Medical Foundation. The area
studied most intensively was Pruden Valley, which lies in the northwestern
part of Claiborne County. It also includes portions of Campbell County, Ten-
nessee and Bell County, Kentucky. The area has a population of 6.000, mostly
coal miners and their families. Other areas in Tennessee studied were in
Morgan, Grundy, Meigs, and Monroe Counties.
349. MILLER, HAROLD W.
Characteristics of mining and non-mining psychiatric patients. Thesis. West
Virginia University. 1960.
350. MILLER, IVA A.
Child health in mining camp and village. ML&W 8:5-8 Ja 1933.
350A. NESTMANN, RALPH H.
The incidence of emotional illness in coal miners in West Virginia. West Vir-
ginia Medical Journal 53:149-52 1956.
351. REYNOLDS, JAMES E.
Anxiety in coal miners. Thesis. West Virginia University. 1959.
"Some relevant characteristics of miners whose conditions were diagnosed as
'Anxiety Reaction' in McDowell County, West Virginia, during the vears 1955
through 1957."
37
352. ROSS, W. D. AND OTHERS
Emotional aspects of respiratory disorders among coal miners. Journal of the
American Medical Association 156:484-87 1954.
353. U. S. COAL MINES ADMINISTRATION
A medical survey of the bituminous coal industry. Washington: GOP, 1947. 244p.
Includes a Supplement to the Report entitled "The coal miner and his family."
A study of first importance.
354. WIESEL, CARL AND MALCOLM ARNY
Psychiatric study of coal miners in Eastern Kentucky area. American Journal of
Psychiatry 108:617-24 1952.
355. WILLIAMS, DORCAS A.
Food habits of the pupils in Monongahela & Dunbar (West Virginia) High
School whose parents are engaged in coal mining. Thesis. West Virginia Uni-
versity. 1952.
LABOR RELATIONS, STRIKES
An enormous amount of material has appeared on labor relations in the
Southern Appalachian coal fields. From the point of view of sheer bulk, 1932
and 1933 were unquestionably the peak years. During that period the miners,
especially those of Harlan County, Kentucky, were "adopted" by many liberal
groups. Indeed, the plight of the miners became one of the favorite causes
of the American Left. There were protest meetings, student marches, and
articles without number. This interest waned as suddenly as it appeared, and
the miners were left in substantially the same position as before. The bulk of
the writing produced during this era was highly polemical in nature. Only the
most significant articles have been listed here. Those interested in this sub-
ject will find much material listed in the Readers Guide to Periodical Litera-
ture for the period. There is also an extensive listing in Edwards (No. 288-
333.)
356. AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION
The Kentucky miners' struggle. New York: The Union, 1932. 23p.
357. BARB, JOHN MILLIKEN
Strikes in the southern West Virginia coal field, 1912-1922. Thesis. West Vir-
ginia University. 1949.
358. BLIZZARD, WILLIAM C.
There's never peace in West Virginia's hills. Nation 177:548-9 1953.
Description of conditions in Widen, West Virginia.
359. BRECKINRIDGE, DESHA AND OTHERS
Kentucky editors look at Kentucky. Nation 134:571-73 1932.
Letters by editors of Kentucky newspapers regarding the trouble In Bell and
Harlan Counties.
360. BYARS, J. C, Jr.
Harlan County; act of God? Nation 134:672-74 1932.
361. CARRITT, G.
American students and Kentucky gunmen. New Statesman and Natioji 3:703-4
1932.
Short account of the expedition of the National Student League to the Kentucky
coal fields.
362. COLEMAN, McALISTER
Men and coal. New York: Farrar & Rinehart, 1943. 350p.
Deals largely with labor relations and working conditions in the coal in-
dustry. Part of the "Labor in Twentieth Century America" series.
363. COWLEY, MALCOLM
Kentucky coal town. New Republic 70:67-70 1932.
Town is Pineville. Replies to this articles appeared in the same journal, issues
of Mr 30, My 18.
38
364. CRAWFORD, CHARLES B.
The mine war on Cabin Creek and Paint Creek, West Virginia in 1912-13.
Thesis. University of Kentucky. 1939.
365. EMMET, BORIS
Labor relations in the Fairmont, West Virginia bituminous coal fields. Washing-
ton: GOP, 1924. 86p. (Bureau of Labor Statistics. Bulletin 361).
366. HACKAMACK, LAWRENCE C.
Cooperation-conflict in labor-management relations; a study of contrasting cases
(women's garment industry and bituminous coal industry). Ann Arbor: Uni-
versity Microfilms, 1956. (Ph.D. dissertation at the State University of Iowa).
367. HUTSON, ANDREW C.
The coal miner's insurrection, 1891-92. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1933.
Protest among East Tennessee miners against the use of convict labor in mines.
368. HUTSON, ANDREW C.
The coal miner's insurrections of 1891 in Anderson County, Tennessee. East
Tennessee Historical Society. Publication 7 (1935) 103-121.
369. LANE, WINTHROP D.
Civil war in West Virginia; a story of the industrial conflict in the coal mines.
New York: Huebusch, 1921. 128p. (On cover: The Freeman Pamphlets).
370. LEE, JENNIE
Kentucky through English eyes. Living Age 342:184-85 1932.
"Of all the God-forsaken spots 1 have yet visited, American mining camps are
certainly the worst."
371. LINTON, RON M.
Kentucky's tragic strike. Nation 188:471-3 1959.
37ia. Mccormick, kyle
The New Kanawha River and the mine war of West Virginia. Charleston:
Matthews Printing Co., 1959. 176p.
372. McGOLDRICK, JOSEPH
College students and Kentucky miners. American Scholar 1:363-65 1932.
The expulsion of "invading" students by the authorities of east Kentucky min-
ing counties.
373. MORONY, IVES GUY
Attitude of coal miners toward union and coal industry. Thesis. West Vir-
ginia University. 1959.
Study made in northern West Virginia.
374. NATIONAL COMMITTEE FOR THE DEFENSE OF POLITICAL PRISONERS
Harlan miners speak; report on terrorism in the Kentucky coal fields. New
York: Harcourt, Brace, 1932. 348p.
The famous report by Theodore Dreiser, Anna Rochester, etc.
375. NIEBUHR, REINHOLD
Religion and the class war in Kentucky. Christian Century 49:637-8 1932.
Report of a visit to Pineville, Kentucky.
375A. PERRY, VERNON F.
The labor struggle at Wilder, Tennessee. Thesis. Vanderbilt. 1934.
376. SOMERS, GERALD G.
Grievance settlement in coal mining. Morgantown: West Virginia University,
1956. 44p. (West Virginia University Business and Economic Studies 4:4).
377. SPERO, STERLING D., AND JACOB ARONOFF
War in the Kentucky mountains. American Mercury 25:226-33 1932.
Harlan County.
39
378. TAYLOR, PAUL F.
The coal mine war in Harlan County, Kentucky, 1931-32. Thesis. University
of Kentucky. 1955.
379. THOMPSON, CRAIG
Reign of terror at Widen, West Virginia. Saturday Evening Post F 20, 1954 17-19.
380. UNITED STATES CONGRESS. SENATE.
Committee on Education and Labor. West Virginia Coal Fields. Washington:
GPO, 1921. 2 volumes.
". . . to investigate the recent acts of violence in the coal fields of West Vir-
ginia and adjacent territory."
381. UNITED STATES CONGRESS. SENATE.
Committee on Interstate Commerce. Conditions in the coal fields of Pennsyl-
vania, West Virginia, and Ohio. Washington: GPO, 1928. 2 volumes.
381A. WEST VIRGINIA. GOVERNOR'S INVESTIGATING COMMITTEE.
Report and Proceedings of Widen Strike Committee. Charleston, 1953. 184p.
(Appears in West Virginia House of Delegates. Journal. Mr 2, 1953).
LIFE IN THE COAL COUNTRY
382. AHRENHOLZ, GLADYS TELLEEN
Factors affecting social participation in coal communities. Thesis. West Vir-
ginia University. 1951.
383. AMERICAN, CONSTITUTIONAL ASSOCIATION
Life in a West Virginia coal field. Charleston, West Virginia, 1923. 58p.
Written to refute "scurrilous articles" which have depicted the coal fields as
"an island of barbarity in a sea of civilization."
384. BALL, RICHARD A.
The Southern Appalachian coal community; an explorative study. Thesis. West
Virginia University. 1960.
385. BARNES, CLARENCE E.
The pattern and nature of the informal and formal institutional contacts
participated in by residents of New Hill. Thesis. West Virginia University. 1952.
New Hill is a small mining community in north-central West Virginia.
386. BROSKY, A. F.
Building a town for a mountain community. Coal Age 23:560-63 1923.
Description of the "model" coal mining town of Jenkins, Kentucky.
387. CRAWFORD, BRUCE
Piney Ridge, Virginia. Virginia Quarterly Revieiv 8:371-84 1932.
Description of life in a coal mining area near the Kentucky border.
388. CRESSEY, PAUL FREDERICK
Social disorganization and reorganization in Harlan County, Kentucky. Ameri-
can Sociological Review 14:389-94 1949.
389. DOTSON, JOHN A.
The public school in the mining community. Thesis. University of Kentucky.
1931.
390. EDWARDS, J. H.
Helping man and family. Coal Age 49. D. 1944 86-93.
Describes efforts of the Jewell Ridge Coal Company to make the coal towns
"better places in which to live" and " to raise the employees esteem of his job."
Area located in the coal fields of southern Virginia, near Bluefield, West Vir-
ginia.
391. ELLIS, MABEL BROWN
Children of the Kentucky coal fields. American Child 1:285-405 1920.
40
392. FRENCH, JACK
Segregation patterns in a coal camp. Thesis. West Virginia University. 1953.
393. GLADDEN, JAMES W., and JOHN R. CHRISTIANSEN
Emergence of urban values in mining families in eastern Kentucky. Rural
Sociology 21:135-39 1956.
394. HOFFMAN, BETTY HANNAH
Meet a soft-coal miner's family of Harlan County, Kentucky. Ladies Home
Journal Mr 1947 225-32.
395. HOLLANDSWORTH. GENEVIEVE
Youth recreation in the coal mining towns of West Virginia. Thesis. West Vir-
ginia University. 1948.
396. KORSON, GEORGE G.
Black land; the way of life in the coal fields. Evanston, Illinois: Row, Peterson,
1941. 72p.
397. LIVINGSTON, WILLIAM J.
Coal miners and religion. Thesis. Union Theological Seminary. 1951.
Research was done in Logan County, West Virginia.
398. MARJA, FERN
Forgotten children: the West Virginia story. Title of a series of six articles
appearing in the New York Post F 22 to F 28 1960.
399. MINARD, RALPH D.
Race relationships in the pocahontas Coal Field. Journal of Social Issues 8:29-44
1952.
Study centered "in that part of the coal field included in McDowell County,
West Virginia."
400. MORRIS, THOMAS JOHN
The coal camp: a pattern of limited community life. Thesis. West Virginia Uni-
versity. 1950.
401. MURPHY, R. E.
A Southern West Virginia mining community. Economic Geography 9:51-59
1933.
402. NORTHRUP, HERBERT R.
The Negro and the United Mine Workers of America. Southern Economic
Journal 9:313-26 1943.
403. PARKER, RUTH L.
With the Friends in the coal fields. ML&W O 1932 3-10.
Activities of the American Friends Service Committee in relieving distress in
the coal fields.
404. RICH, MARK
Some churches of coal mining communities of West Virginia. New York, 1951.
62p.
Survey sponsored by the West Virginia Council of Churches & the Committee
for Cooperative Field Research.
405. ROGERS, JACK
I remember that mining town. West Virginia Review 15:203-5 1938.
Vivid description of life in a West Virginia mine camp during the author's
boyhood.
406. STRONG, EDNA R.
A sociological analysis of ecology, structure and processes in a Virginia coal min-
ing community. Thesis. Louisiana State University. 1943.
41
407. UNSIGNED
Two counties mine coal the hard way. Business Week. S 12, 1953 90-94.
Description of the small non-union mines in Leslie and Clay counties Kentucky.
408. WARBURTON, AMBER A.
Guidance in a rural-industrial community; Harlan County, a Kentucky coal
mining district, plans with and for its boys and girls. Washington: National
Educational Association, 1954. 249p.
409. WILLIAMS, L. M.
Transformation of a coal mining town. Mining Congress Journal Ag. 1943 37-40.
Describes the improvement of Wheelwright, Kentucky, as the result of a com-
munity improvement program of the Inland Steel Company.
410. WILLIAMS, STANLEY B.
Disorganization and delinquency in three coal communities. Thesis. West Vir-
ginia University. 1954.
ECONOMICS
There is a voluminous literature on the economic problems of the coal in-
dustry. It is beyond the scope of this work to attempt a bibliography of the
industry as a whole. Only titles having a direct bearing on the Southern
Appalachian area as such are listed below. The bibliographies included in
most of these works will prove helpful to those interested in other aspects
of the subject. Students should also consult Wadleigh (329) for material appear-
ing before 1935. By far the most detailed history of the industry is Howard N.
Eavenson's The First Century a?id a Quarter of American Coal Industry (Pitts-
burgh: Privately Printed, 1942. 701p). This work contains an exhaustive
bibliography (pp621-64). Statistical information may be obtained from such
sources as Minerals Yearbook, Saivard's Annual or Bituminous Coal Facts.
411. BACKMAN, JULES
Bituminous coal wages, profits, and productivity, n.p. 1950. 128p.
"Prepared for Southern Coal Producers Association."
412. BUCHANAN, JOHN A.
A survey of labor requirements in northern West Virginia coal mines in 1957.
Thesis. West Virginia University 1960.
413. FISHER, WALDO E.
Economic consequences of the seven-hour day and wage changes in the bitum-
inous coal industry. Philadelphia: 1939. 130p. (Half-title: Industrial Research
Department, Wharton School of Finance & Commerce, University of Penn-
sylvania. Research Studies XXXII).
414. GREENSLADE, RUSH V.
The economic effects of collective bargaining in bituminous coal mining. Ph.D.
University of Chicago. 1952.
415. HURST, THOMAS E.
Tennessee coal mining and marketing trends. Thesis. ETSC. 1951.
416. LEBUS, WILLIAM F. Jr.
Economic data on eastern Kentucky coal field. Frankfort: Agricultural & In-
dustrial Development Board of Kentucky, 1956. 32p. proc.
416A. MERRILL, WILLIAM M.
Economics of the southern smokeless coals. Ph.D. University of Illinois. 1953.
417. NEWHOUSE, JOSEPH
Labor cost in the bituminous coal industry. Thesis. West Virginia University.
1951.
418. ROUSE, ELAINE
Union economic policies and union discipline in the bituminous wage dispute
of 1949-1950. Thesis. West Virginia University. 1953.
42
419. SCOTT, GEORCE H.
A study of the United Mine Workers of America Welfare and Retirement Fund.
Thesis. West Virginia University. 1951.
420. SOMERS, GERAUD G.
Effects of North-South wage uniformity on southern coal production. Southern
Economic Journal. 20:121-29 1953
421. THOMPSON, JAMES H.
Significant trends in the West Virginia coal industry, 1900-1957. Morgantown:
West Virginia University, 1958 G5p. (West Virginia University Business &
Economic Studies 6:1).
Devoted largely to statistics on production, employment, wages, accidents, etc.
422. WHITE THOMAS E.
Development and operation of the welfare and retirement fund in the bitumin-
ous coal industry. Ph.D. University of Pittsburgh. 1954.
MISCELLANEOUS
423. ALLRED, CHARLES E. AND OTHERS
Grundy County, Tennessee; relief in a coal mining community. Tennessee
Agricultural Experiment Station. Report 11, 1936.
424. BAILEY, C4ROL
Training for coal miners in cooperation with the public schools of Tennessee.
Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1952.
425. BENDALL, JOHN WENTWORTH
A study of the Minnesota multiphasic personality inventory and its use in
identification of acceptable mine foremen. Thesis. West Virginia University. 1955.
426. BOTT, MATTHIAS WHITFIELD
Some aspects of the coal mining industry in Monongalia County, West Virginia.
Thesis. West Virginia University. 1949.
427. DUFF, FRANK
Government in an eastern Kentucky coal field countv. Thesis. University of
Kentucky. 1950.
428. DURRETT HAROLD L.
A validation study of a psychogical test battery for selection of Joy ripper-type
continuous miner operators. Thesis. West Virginia University. I960.
429. KENTUCKY. LEGISLATIVE RESEARCH COMMISSION
Strip mining; a 1954 Kentucky legislative problem. Frankfurt, 1954. (Legislative
Researh Commission. Information Bulletin 10).
430. KENWORTHY, WILMER E.
First aid to soft coal— then a major operation. MLirW Ap 1933 1-6.
431. KORSON, GEORGE G.
Coal dust on the fiddle: songs and stories of the bituminous industry. Phila-
delphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1943. 460p.
432. MORONY, IVES G.
Attitudes of coal miners toward union and coal industry. Thesis West Virginia
University. 1959.
Study centered in Monongalia County, West Virginia.
433. MAZZEI, FRANK JOSEPH
A study of the factors influence job-satisfaction among factory workers of Clarks-
burg, West Virginia, and coal miners of Morgantown, West Virginia. Thesis.
West Virginia University. 1953.
43
433A. RATLIFF, PAUL
Yesterday's coal town. ML&W Winter 1960 20-23.
A "photo-essay" depicting conditions in a declining mine village.
434. WILFONG, HARRY DEAN
A cross-validation study of a mining foreman selection key, devised from the
Minnesota multiphasic personality inventory. Thesis. West Virginia University.
44
Relig
ion
BIBLIOGRAPHY
435. NOSS, MARIE G.
Books on the southern mountain area that contain religion or sections on
religion, 1947-1955. Berea: Berea College, nd. proc.
GENERAL
436. BRUERE, MARTHA B. & ROBERT
The church of the lean land. Outlook 109:987-95 1915.
437. BRUNK, HARRY A.
History of Mennonites in Virginia. Staunton: McClure Printing Co., 1959+ .
Volume One covers the period 1727-1900.
438. CAMPBELL, ROBERT F.
Mission work among the mountain whites in Ashville Presbytery, North Caro-
lina. Ashville: Citizens Co., 1899.
439. CASSELL, CHARLES W. AND OTHERS
History of the Lutheran Church in Virginia and East Tennessee, Strasburg,
Virginia: Shenandoah Publishing House, 1930. 401p.
Tables and index: pp343-401.
440. CLARK, ELMER T.
The small sects in America. New York and Nashville: Abingdon-Cokesbury
Press, 1949. 256p.
441. CRAIG, EDWARD M.
Highways and byways of Appalachia. Kingsport, Tennessee: Kingsport Press,
1927, 183p.
"A study of the work of the Synod of Appalachia of the Presbyterian Church
in the United States."
442. DAVIDSON, PERRY
Religious response in our corner of the mountain. ML&W. Ja. 1926 5-11.
443. DORAN, PAUL E.
Some church problems in the Southern Appalachians. MLirW. Ap. 1929 11-15.
444. DOUGLAS, HARLAN P.
Christian reconstruction in the South. Boston; Pilgrim Press, 1909. 407p.
Much of the work deals with the problem of the Negro, especially in the deep
south. However, pp303-66 are devoted to the Southern Appalachians. Chapter
XI: "The passing of the Mountaineer."
444A. FOREMAN, KENNETH J.
Propose unity in Appalachia. Christian Century. 73:929-30 1956.
Report of a conference of mountain workers at Berea. The Conference urged
that all churches cooperate "to provide for the adequate churching of all
people of the Appalachian region."
445. FORTUNE, ALONZO W.
The Disciples in Kentucky. Lexington: Convention of the Christian Churches
in Kentucky, 1932. 415p.
446. GARNETT, W. E.
The Virginia rural church and related influences, 1900-1950. Virginia Agri-
cultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 479, 1957. 88p.
Brings up to date and expands a similar study made in 1929.
45
447. GRIFFITH, HENRIETTA MAE
A history of religious education in the Kentucky mountains. Thesis. Asbury
Theological Seminary. 1950.
448. GUERRANT, EDWARD O.
The galex gatherers; the gospel among the highlanders. Richmond: Onward
Press, 1910. 220p.
449. HALE, WADE H.
The scope of religious education in the secondary schools of Greenville County,
South Carolina. Thesis. Furman University. 1958.
450. HAMILTON, MICHAEL
Ministry to the southern mountaineer. A report of the research work done by
the Church of the Advent in the neighborhood of Walnut Hills, Cincinnati,
Ohio. August 1955 to August 1958. Cincinnati, 1958. 28p. proc.
451. HILBISH, FLORENCE M. A.
Tales of a frontier preacher. New York: Pagent, 1959. 156p.
Reminiscences by a Methodist minister of his career working in the West
Virginia Conferences during the first third of the 20th Century. Edited by his
daughter.
452. HOLT, JOHN B.
Holiness religion: cultural shock and social reorganization. American Sociological
Review. 5:740-47 1940.
453. HOOKER, ELIZABETH R.
The churches of the highlanders. ML&W. Jl 1933 25-29.
454. HOOKER, ELIZABETH R.
Religion in the highlands; native churches and missionary enterprises in the
Southern Appalachian area. New York: Home Missions Council, 1933. 319p.
455. HUGHSON, WALTER, compiler
The Church's mission to the mountaineers of the South. Hartford, Conn.:
Church Missions Publishing Co., 1908. 131 p.
The church is the Protestant Episcopal Church.
456. KAUFMAN, HAROLD F.
Religious organization in Kentucky. Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station.
Bulletin 524, 1948. 44p.
Church membership, Sunday school enrollment etc., by county.
457. KAUFMAN, HAROLD F.
Rural churches in Kentucky, 1947. Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station.
Bulletin 530, 1949. 48p.
Church membership, number of ministers etc., by county.
458. KELLY, L. C.
The mountain preacher and the mountain problem. ML&W. Ap 1933 11-16.
A frank discussion of "the failure of the religious leader to measure up to the
moral demands of the situation."
459. LEDBETTER, MARGARET
The village church in North Carolina. Thesis. Duke University. 1931.
460. McAllister, james gray
Edward O. Guerrant: apostle to the Southern Hihglands. Richmond: Rich-
mond Press, Inc., 1950. 238p.
Biography of the noted evangelist and founder of the "Society of Soul Winners"
(American Inland Mission).
461. McCONNELL, LELA G.
Faith victorious in the Kentucky mountains; the story of twenty-two years of
spirit-filled ministry. Winona Lake, Indiana: Light & Life Press, 1946. 237p.
Story of the Kentucky Mountain Holiness Association, its schools and activities.
46
462. McCONNELL, LELA
The Pauline ministry in the Kentucky Mountains. Berne, Indiana: Light and
Hope Publications, 8th Edition. (1950?). 200p.
"A brief account of the Kentucky Mountain Holiness Association.*'
463. MARTIN, ISAAC P.
A minister in the Tennessee Valley. Nashville: Parthenon Press, 19:54. 234p.
464. MASTERS, FRANK M.
History of Baptists in Kentucky. Louisville: Baptist Historical Society, 1953.
639p. (Publication No. 5 of the Society).
645. MAURER, BERYL B.
The rural church and organized community activity; a study of church-
community relations in two East Tennessee communities. Thesis. University of
Tennessee. 1953.
466. MORSE, HERMANN N.
Missionary program in the Highlands. ML&W. Jl 1933 30-35.
467. MOUNTAIN MINISTERS
The last source for advice? MLirW. Fall 1959 23-27.
A discussion of the reason why mountain people turn so infrequently to
ministers for advice.
468. MYERS, GRACE F.
Them missionary women; or work in the southern mountains. Hillsdale,
Michigan, 1911. 132p.
469. OLMSTEAD, PAUL D.
Adventure in Tennessee: "wreck-reaction" becomes recreation through church
leadership. Recreation 43:396-98 1949.
Describes the activities of the Alpine Recreation Association in improving
leisure activities for the youth of the Overton County area.
470. ORMOND, JESSE M.
The country church in North Carolina. Durham: Duke University Press, 1931.
369p.
Includes a county by county survey.
471. PARKS, JAMES R.
A follow-up study of attitudes of Sullivan County high school seniors toward
the church. Thesis. ETSC, 1953.
472. PIEPER, MARY G.
Church organization in Bradley County, Tennessee in 1950. Thesis. University
of Tennessee. 1952.
473. POPE, LISTON
Millhands and preachers. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1942. 369p. (Yale
Studies in Religious Education XV.)
Study centered in Gaston County, North Carolina. Bibliography pp337-57.
474. RYLAND, GARNETT
The Baptists of Virginia, 1699-1926. Richmond: Virginia Baptist Board of
Missions & Education, 1955. 372p.
475. SMILEY, DAVID L.
Educational attitudes of North Carolina Baptists. North Carolina Historical
Review 35:316-27 1958.
476. TADLOCK. E. Y.
Church problems in the mountains. A//.dTP. Ap 1930 6-8.
47
477. WEATHERFORD, WILLIS D. (Editor)
Religion in the Appalachian Mountains; a symposium. Berea College, 1955. 132p.
Contents: the religion of the pioneers; the Presbyterians: Baptists in the
Southern Highlands; Methodists work in the mountains; the work of the
Christian Church; small sects in the mountains; brief suggestions for improve-
ment.
478. WHEELER, LESTER R.
Religious ideals in the highlands. ML&W. Fall 1951 26-31.
478A. WHITAKER, WALTER C.
A round robin; the southern highlands anil highlanders. Hartford: Church
Mission Publishing Co., 1916. 147p.
479. WILLIAMS, CLAUDE C. AND OTHERS
The Pentecostal churches. ML&W. Winter 1944 18-22.
480. WILSON, WARREN H.
The educated minister in the mountains. ML&W. Ap 1930 20-24.
48
Negroes, Indians and Other
Minority Racial and Ethnic Groups
481. BAILEY, E.B.
The Negro in East Tennessee. Thesis. New York University. 1947.
482. BALL, BONNIE
A vanishing race. ML&W. Sum 1960 39-42.
A description of the Malungeons, "a strange group of people whose origin
was, and has remained, one of the deepest and most fascinating mysteries of
American Ethnology."
483. BEALE, CALVIN L.
American triracial isolates. Eugenics Quarterly 4:187-96. 1957.
A study of groups of mixed Indian, white and Negro ancestry, many of which
are located in the Southern Appalachian area. Includes a listing of such by
state and county.
484. CANSLER, CHARLES W.
Three generations; the story of a colored family of eastern Tennessee. Kings-
port: Kingsport Press, 1939. 173p.
485. COMETTI, ELIZABETH
Swiss immigration to West Virginia, 1864-1884. Mississippi Valley Historical
Review 47:66-87 1960.
486. COOPER, H. S.
German and Swiss colonization of Morgan County. Thesis. University of
Tennessee. 1925.
487. DAVIS, HESTER A.
Social interaction and kinship in Big Cove Community, Cherokee, North Caro-
lina. Thesis. University of North Carolina. 1957.
A Cherokee Indian Community.
487A. DUNLAP, A. R. AND C. A. WESLAGER
Trends in the naming of tri-racial mixed blood groups in the eastern United
States. American Speech 22:81-87 1947.
488. GARDNER, ANNIE C.
Social organization and community solidarity in Painttown, Cherokee, North
Carolina. Thesis. University of North Carolina. 1958.
A Cherokee Indian Community.
489. GILBERT, WILLIAM H.
Mixed bloods of the Upper Monongahela Valley, West Virginia. Journal of
the Washington Academy of Sciences. XXXVI: 1-13 1946.
A description of the "Guinea Negroes" of north-central West Virginia.
490. GRANT, JOHN L.
Behavioral premises in the culture of conservative eastern Cherokee Indians.
Thesis. University of North Carolina. 1957.
490A. GULICK, JOHN
Cherokees at the crossroads. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina. Insti-
tute for Research in Social Science. 1960. 202p.
"This monograph is an attempt to draw together the findings of a study of the
present-day ways of life of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians."
491. JACKSON, HELEN FRANCIS
The German Swiss settlers at Gruetli, Tennessee. Thesis. Vanderbilt. 1933.
49
492. KOLLMORGEN, WALTER M.
The German Settlement in Cullman County, Alabama; an agricultural island
in the cotton belt. Washington: USDA, 1941. 60p. proc.
493. KOLLMORGAN, WALTER M.
The German Swiss in Franklin County, Tennessee; a study of the significance
of cultural considerations in farming enterprises. Washington: USDA, 1940. 113p.
proc.
494. KOLLMORGAN, WALTER M.
A reconnaissance of some cultural-agricultural islands in the South. Economic
Geography 17:409-30 1941.
495. NESKAUG, SELMER R.
Agricultural and social aspects of the Swiss settlement in Grundy County,
Tennessee. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 193G.
496. NESKAUG, SELMER R. AND OTHERS
How the Swiss farmers operate on the Cumberland Plateau. Tennessee Agri-
cultural Experiment Station. Monograph 33, 1937.
497. PATTON, CATHERINE
West Virginia's so-called "Guineas." West Virginia Review 6:270 1929.
Description of a "unique tribe of people" in Barbour County.
498. TOWER, J. ALLEN AND WALTER WOLFE
Ethnic groups in Cullman County, Alabama. Geographical Review 33:276-85.
1943.
"At present there are nearly 2,500 German-Americans in the county."
499. WILLIAM, ELLIS RAY
Contacts of Negroes and whites in Morgantown, Thesis. West Virginia Uni-
versity. 1952.
500. WORDEN, WILLIAM L.
Sons of the legend. Saturday Evening Post O 18, 1947 28-29.
"Surrounded by mystery and fantastic legends, the Malungeons live on New-
man's Ridge, deep in the Tennessee mountains. The story of a colony whose
background is lost in antiquity."
50
Education
ATTENDANCE, DROPOUTS
500A. COBB, IRENE S.
Varience in the theory and practice of attendance workers in selected East Ten-
nessee systems. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1959.
501. COOPER, JOHN R.
A study of pupil withdrawal in ten secondary schools of Floyd, Knott, Letcher,
and Pike counties through the school year of 1932-33. Thesis. University of
Kentucky. 1934.
502. GIBSON, VIVIAN L.
A study of voluntary withdrawals from McHenry and five feeder schools in
Floyd County, Georgia. Thesis. University of Alabama. 1952.
503. GOFF, KENNETH JAMES
An investigation of the factors causing absenteeism at Blounlvillc High School.
Thesis. ETSC. 1957.
504. GOLDEN, CHARLES E.
A survey of the causes of absences in the public school system of White County
and Sparta, Tennessee. Thesis. George Peabody College for Teachers. 1954.
505. HARGROVE, JACK B.
A comparative study of school dropouts from 1945-50 in Holt Junior High
School and Taylorville Junior High School, Tuscaloosa County, Alabama.
Thesis. Alabama State College. 1952.
506. HAROLD, KATHLEEN ETTA
A study of a group of drop-outs of the Greeneville High School. Thesis ETSC.
1952.
507. HARRILL, BOB E.
A study of the practices and techniques used by principals and teachers in the
McMinn County schools to improve school attendance. Thesis. University of
Tennessee. 1958.
507A. INGRAM, HENRY R.
Study of factors causing potential drop-outs to remain in the Mitchell County,
North Carolina high schools. Thesis. ETSC. 1959.
508. JOHNSON, ROY L.
A study of reorganization of attendance centers in Hawkins County, Tennessee.
Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1955.
509. JOHNSON, VICTOR M.
A study of the drop-outs from the Bristol, Tennessee school system in grades
8-12 from 1946 to 1951. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1952.
510. LANE, BILLY J.
Some factors affecting school attendance as a family problem, as revealed by a
comparison of two groups of families in Washington County, Tennessee. Thesis.
ETSC. 1952.
511. LIVINGSTON, INEZ
School attendance in Harlan County, Kentucky, 1948-1954. Thesis. Ohio State
University. 1956.
512. MAUNEY, MARGARET
They come to school in Cherokee. North Carolina Education. My 1950 14.
Discussion of attendance problems in a North Carolina mountain county.
51
513. MORGAN, W. L.
Improving school attendance in six white elementary schools in Polk County,
Georgia. Thesis. University of Georgia. 1949.
514. MOSBY, ROBERT H.
Chief causes of non-attendance in the schools of McDowell County, West Vir-
ginia. Thesis. University of Kentucky. 1940.
514A. NICELY, BILLY K.
A study of the reorganization of the attendance centers of the Grainger County
school system. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1959.
515. SHAFER, HOLLY M.
Why pupils drop out of school before finishing the grades in the rural schools
of West Virginia. Thesis. West Virginia University. 1929.
516. STEWART, ACIE
A study of students dropping out of Wyoming County (West Virginia) high
schools for the 1950-51 school term. Thesis. Marshall College. 1952.
EDUCATIONAL SURVEYS OF COUNTIES, CITIES AND AREAS
517. ALABAMA EDUCATIONAL SURVEY COMMISSION
Public education in Alabama. Washington: American Council on Education,
1945. 452p.
518. BENTON, ROBERT L.
A study of McMinn County (Tennessee) High School as determined by its
graduates. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1952.
519. BEREA COLLEGE. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Evidences of inequality of educational opportunity in Kentucky mountain coun-
ties. Berea: Berea College, 1953.
520. BEREA COLLEGE. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Rural school improvement project leport, 1953-57. Berea: Berea College, 1958.
174p. proc.
521. BOWMAN, OWEN
A study of the small school in the mountains of Virginia. Thesis. VPI. 1953.
Includes much socio-economic information on Carroll County, Virginia. The
school under consideration is the Lambsburg School, a combination grade and
high school in an isolated area of that county.
522. CARSON-NEWMAN COLLEGE. (Jefferson City)
An educational study of Jefferson County, Tennessee. Carson-Newman College
Book Store, 1936. 114p. proc.
523. DAVIS, HAZE A.
A study of the four high schools in Claiborne County, Tennessee. Thesis. Uni-
versity of Tennessee. 1957.
524. DAWSON, GEORGE W.
Problem survey of the elementary and high school at Crum (West Virginia).
Thesis. Marshall College. 1952.
525. DYKES, ARCHIE REECE
What the patrons of Hawkins County Schools think about their schools. Thesis.
ETSC. 1956.
526. ENSLOW, ELLA. [Lena Murray]
Schoolhouse in the foothills. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1935. 239p.
A narrative of a teacher assigned to a one-room school in the Southern Appa-
lachian coal region. Period is the Depression era of the early 1930s.
527. FROST, NORMAN
A statistical study of the public schools of the Southern Appalachian Moun-
tains. Washington: GPO, 1915. 7Ip. (U.S. Bureau of Education Bulletin 636).
528. GAUMNITZ, WALTER H.
Education in the Southern Mountains. Washington: GPO, 1937. 51p. (U.S.
Office of Education Bulletin. 1937, No. 26).
529. GIBBS, JAMES E.
Public education in Tennessee; grades 1 through 12. Nashville, 1957. 487p.
A report to the Education Survey Subcommittee of the Tennessee Legislative
Council. A exhaustive study of public education in Tennessee.
530. GLENN, ALFONSO.
Survey of public education in Watauga County, North Carolina Thesis. Uni-
versity of North Carolina. 1932.
531. GOOCH, WILBUR I. AND FRANKLIN J. KELLER
Breathitt County in the Southern Appalachians. Occupations 14:1012-1110 1936.
A detailed study of the problems of education and vocational guidance in a
mountain area.
532. GREGORY, MADELINE T.
A survey of special education services in Washington, Carter and Sullivan
Counties, Tennessee. Thesis. ETSC. 1955.
533. HOLLAND, CARL W.
Educational facilities and economic development of Bristol, 1930-1950. Thesis.
ETSC. 1956.
534. LENTZ, FRED W.
A survey of the educational facilities of the public schools of Alexander County,
North Carolina. Thesis. University of North Carolina. 1951.
535. PUBLIC EDUCATION IN HARLAN COUNTY, KENTUCKY
Bulletin of the Bureau of School Services. College of Education, University of
Kentucky. 20:2 (D 1947) 201p.
A thorough study of the educational problems of Harlan County. Includes
much of interest to the economist and sociologist.
536. RAY, A. HERMAN
An economic, educational and social study of Franklin County, Tennessee.
Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1937.
537. ROSS, ERNEST LAFAYETTE
An educational study of Bradley County, Tennessee Thesis. University of Ten-
nessee. 1940.
538. SHELTON, TOM AND FRED NEIL
Trends and needs of the Washington County, Tennessee schools, 1948-1966.
Thesis. ETSC. 1954.
539. SOUTHERN EDUCATIONAL BOARD
Educational conditions in the Southern Appalachians. Knoxville: Southern
Educational Board, 1902. 32p. (Bulletin of the SEB 1:1).
540. THOMAS, WALTER B.
A survey of educational facilities in Cherokee County, North Carolina. Thesis.
University of North Carolina. 1948.
541. THOMASSON, LILLIAN F.
Education in Swain County, North Carolina. Thesis. University of North Caro-
lina. 1939.
542. WALKER, ZEDDIE
An educational study of Grundy County, Tennessee. Thesis. University of Ten-
nessee. 1952.
53
543. WEST VIRGINIA. LEGISLATIVE INTERIM COMMITTEE
A survey of the educational programs of the West Virginia public schools.
Charleston, 1957. 449p.
A comprehensive and detailed study of the public school system of West Vir-
ginia.
544. WILSON, ROSS HARLAN
A study of secondary schools of Morgan County. Thesis. Universitv of Tennessee.
1941.
FINANCE AND ADMINISTRATION
545. ACUFF, J. T.
The effort and ability of Grainger County to support its schools. Thesis. Uni-
versity of Tennessee. 1955.
546. CRAGHEAD, PAUL
Cost of operating the schools in Raleigh County (West Virginia) from 1940-
50. Thesis. Marshall College. 1952.
547. DYKES, ARCHIE R.
A study of public school finance in the Southern Appalachian region. Ed.D.
University of Tennessee. 1959.
"The major trend in school revenue during the period under study was the
decreasing importance of local contributions."
548. FRYE, PAUL DEWEY
A suggested plan of consolidation of the schools of Greene County, Tennessee.
Thesis. ETSC. 1958.
549. GARLAND, MATILDA PIERCE
Effect of consolidation of Johnson County schools. Thesis. ETSC. 1956.
550. HUMAN, WILLIAM D.
A study preparatory to cooperative development of board of education policies
for Morgan County, Tennessee. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1954.
551. LIVFSAY, GLENN, Q.
A study of public school finance in Hancock County, Tennessee. Thesis. Uni-
versity of Tennessee. 1954.
552. MILLS, ROBERT L.
A method of measuring the financial ability of Kentucky school districts to
support an educational program. Bulletin of the Bureau of School Services,
College of Education, University of Kentucky. 24:1 (1951), 97p.
Much useful statistical data. Arranged by county.
552A. MITCHELL, CARRIE
An analysis of the possibilities for local support of education in Pickett County,
Tennessee. Thesis. Tennessee Polytechnic. 1959.
553. MORGAN, JESSE W.
Excess levies and school bond issues in Wyoming County (West Virginia) from
1933-1951. Thesis. Marshall College. 1952.
554. MULLIKAN, TRUMAN S.
An analysis of school district organization in Greenville County, South Caro-
lina. Thesis. Furman University. 1952.
554A. NICHOLS, EARL
An analysis of Putnam County's ability to support education based on a study
and comparison of assessed value to real value of property. Thesis. Tennessee
Polytechnic. 1959.
555. SMELCER, BUNA
A study of financing a program of education in Sevier County, Tennessee. Thesis.
University of Tennessee. 1956.
54
556. STRADLEY, WILLIAM B.
Local ability to support education ... in Monroe County, Tennessee. Thesis.
University of Tennessee. 1955.
557. VINSON, LACY W.
A study of the ability of Coke County to support its schools. Thesis. Univer-
versity of Tennessee. 1957.
558. WILLIAMS, PEARL D.
The development of a statement of written policies for the Roane County,
Tennessee board of education. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1958.
HISTORY
559. ALLEN, ROSCOE J.
A history and development of education in Wilkes County, North Carolina.
Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1952.
5G0. ANDERSON, PAUL FAIN
The history of educational development in Sullivan County, Tennessee. Thesis.
University of Tennessee. 1936.
561. ARCHER, CORDELIA
History of the schools of Johnson City, Tennessee. 1868-1950. Thesis. ETSC. 1953.
562. BAILEY, EDGAR W.
History of education of Magoffin County, Kentucky. Thesis. University of
Kentucky. 1932.
563. BENNETT, CLEMMON A.
History of education in Gordon County, Georgia. Thesis. University of Ken-
tucky. 1932.
564. BLAIR, REUBEN MOORE
Development of education in Polk County, Tennessee. Thesis. University of
Tennessee. 1941.
565. G\RDER, ROSCOE H.
History of education in Jackson County, Kentucky. Thesis. University of Ken-
tucky. 1937.
566. COBB, DONALD
The educational development of Tyler County, West Virginia. Thesis. Marshall
College. 1952.
567. CRICK, HERBERT W.
Historv of education in Pike County, Kentucky. Thesis. University of Kentucky.
1930.
568. COOKE. KENNIS
A history of education in Wyoming County (West Virginia). Thesis. Marshall
College. 1952.
569. COPE, ANNIS D.
A history of education in Hawkins County with special reference to Rock Hill
School. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1957.
570. ELKINS. JOHN E.
History of education of Lawrence County, Kentucky. Thesis. University of
Kentucky. 1935.
571. ELROD, HENRY J.
Educational development of Oconee County, S.C. Thesis. University of South
Carolina. 1934.
572. FRAZIER, CHALMER
History of education of Floyd County, Kentucky. Thesis. L T niversity of Kentucky.
1939.
55
573. FRIEDL, JOSEPH. J.
History of education in McDowell County, West Virginia. Thesis. University
of Kentucky. 1940.
574. GABBARD, EUGENE
History of education in Owsley County, Kentucky, Thesis. University of Ken-
tucky. 1939.
575. HINEBAUGH, MARGARET H.
History of education of Marion County, West Virginia. Thesis. West Virginia
University. 1940.
576. HUNTER, CATHERINE H.
A history of higher education in Franklin County, Tennessee. Thesis. Univer-
versity of Tennessee. 1940.
577. HURT, A. B.
Educational development of Ashe County. Thesis. University of North Caro-
lina. 1929.
578. JACKSON, WARD B.
The history of education of Boyd County, Kentucky. Thesis. University of
Kentucky, 1932.
579. KNIGHT, MAZIE M.
A history of the secondary schools of Cocke County, Tennessee. Thesis. Uni-
sity of Tennessee. 1952.
580. LADD, ROBERT A.
The development of education in Roane County, Tennessee. Thesis. University
of Tennessee, 1958.
581. McCOY, LOTTIE
History of education in Harlan County, Kentucky. Thesis. University of Ken-
tucky. 1936.
582. McDADE, FRANK E.
History of education in Logan County, West Virginia. Thesis. University of
Kentucky. 1941.
583. MALONE, HOWARD D.
A history of education in Jefferson County, Tennessee. Thesis. University of
Tennessee. 1955.
584. NORTON, EGBERT
History of education in Rockcastle County, Kentucky. Thesis. University of
Kentucky. 1932.
585. POWERS. OZELLE SINA
A history of education in McMinn County, Tennessee. Thesis. University of
Tennessee. 1950.
585A. PRATT, C. W.
The history and development of education in Knox County, Tennessee. Thesis.
University of Tennessee. 1959.
586. QUALLS, DANIEL
History of education in Carter County, Kentucky. Thesis. University of Ken-
tucky. 1931.
587. RICE, LAWRENCE K.
History of education in Breathitt County, Kentucky. Thesis. University of Ken-
tucky. 1933.
588. RIDENOUR, GEORGE LAWRENCE
The development of public education in Campbell County, Tennessee. Thesis.
University of Tennessee. 1950.
56
589. ROLSTON, FRANCES
History of education in Letcher County, Kentucky. Thesis. University of Ken-
tucky. 1939.
590. SEXTON, OSWELL S.
A history of education in Scott County, Tennessee. Thesis. University of Ten-
nessee. 1951.
591. TAYLOR, JOHN M.
History of education in Laurel County, Kentucky. Thesis. University of Ken-
tucky. 1932.
592. VEAL, CORA T.
The development of education in Monroe County, Tennessee. Thesis. Uni-
versity of Tennessee. 1958.
593. WEAVER, HAZEL F.
The history of public education in Fauquier County, Virginia, 1871-1954.
Thesis. American University. 1954.
594. WILLIAMS, FRANK B., JR.
The East Tennessee Education Association, 1903-1954. East Tennessee Historical
Society Publications 27:49-79. 1955.
595. WOODSIDE, ROBERT E.
The educational development of Avery County (North Carolina). Thesis. Appa-
lachian State Teachers College. 1952.
596. YOUNG, HARRY F.
History of education in Wayne County, Kentucky. Thesis. University of Ken-
tucky. 1927.
NEGRO
597. CARTER, R. G.
A study of the progress of Negro education in Saint Clair County, Alabama.
Thesis. Alabama State College. 1953.
598. CARUTHERS, EUGENE
An investigation of the exceptional child in the Negro secondary schools of
East Tennessee. Thesis. ETSC. 1957.
599. DIXON, HERTHA
A survey of the library facilities in the Negro schools of Tuscaloosa County,
Alabama. Thesis. Alabama State College. 1952.
600. FOSTER, CLEMENTINE R.
A critical study of education for Negroes in Cleveland County, North Carolina
from 1944 to 1954. Thesis. North Carolina College. 1957.
601. FULLER, R. V.
A study of the physical education problems as found in Negro schools in
East Tennessee. Thesis. Tennessee Agricultural and Industrial University. 1956.
602. GIVHAN, MERCER A.
Factors contributing to the educational development of the Negro schools in
the Jefferson County (Alabama) school system, 1945-51. Thesis. Alabama State
College. 1952.
603. GLASS, DANIEL
A study of the causes of drop-outs and irregular attendance among boys in
the four Negro high schools of Talladega County, Alabama. Thesis. Tuskegee
Institute. 1953.
604. HOLLEY, MARIE E.
A study of absenteeism in the Tazewell County one room Negro elementary
schools. Thesis. Ohio State University. 1954.
57
605. INGRAM, MILTON J.
A history of Negro education in Wilkes County, North Carolina. Thesis. North
Carolina Agricultural & Technical College. 1954.
606. JACKSON, MINNIE L.
A historical development of schools for Negroes in Walker County, Georgia.
Thesis. Tennessee A & I State University. 1958.
607. JONES, ABRAHAM
The status of the Negro teachers in Blount, Cullman, Dekalh and Marshall
Counties, Alabama, 1952-53. Thesis. Alabama Stale College. 1954.
608. LONDON, MARTHA A.
An analysis of the types of retardation in the elementary department of the
five Negro union schools in rural Cleveland County. Thesis. North Carolina
Agricultural & Technical College. 1952.
609. MARTIN, ARLEE
History of the development of Negro public schools in Bradley County,
Tennessee. 1931-1951. Thesis. Tennessee Agricultural & Industrial University.
1952.
610. MAYNOR, THEODORE R.
A historical analysis of student drop-outs in the Negro schools for Bibb County,
Alabama. Thesis. Alabama State College. 1954.
611. MINNIS, MARTHA A.
A study designed for the attitudes of the Negro teachers of Bedford County,
Virginia toward in-service teacher education. Thesis. North Carolina Agricul-
tural and Technical College. 1954.
612. MITCHELL, CLEOPHUS H.
A study of the changes in the educational levels of the Negro teachers in Jef-
ferson County, Alabama, 1930-50. Thesis. Fisk University. 1952.
613. RAKESTRAW, ISAAC K.
Negro education in Cocke County. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1956.
613A. SMITH, ELIZABETH V.
An accounting study of the educational progress of Knoxville Negro pupils over
a sixteen-year period. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1959.
614. STARR, DONALD H.
The educational progress of the Negro schools in Cherokee County, Alabama
from 1930-1950. Thesis. Alabama State College. 1952.
615. TRUESDELL, FRED L.
The development of Negro education in Rutherford County, North Carolina.
Thesis. North Carolina Agricultural & Technical College. 1954.
PRIVATE, CHURCH AND FOLK SCHOOLS
So far the volume of published material is concerned, the late 1920's and the
early 1930's represent the heyday of the privately-supported mountain school.
During that period even the mass-circulation magazines carried numerous
articles on the schools and their accomplishments. Such small-circulation but
influential journals as the Nation and New Republic devoted much attention
to the educational and social problems of the Southern Appalachians. Indeed,
the mountain children, like the Harlan County coal miners, became during the
early 1930's one of the favorite causes of social reformers. However, there lias
been a marked decline in the interest in— or at least the writing about— the
mountain schools since the Second World War. The two outstanding ex-
ceptions have been Berea College and the Highlander Folk School. The con-
tinued interest in Berea is doubtless a reflection of that school's vitality ami
genuine importance. The interest in Highlander, on the other hand, has been
due almost entirely to the school's alleged communist affiliations. Most of the
literature on the matter is highly polemical in nature.
58
GENERAL
616. BIDSTRUP, GEORGE
The folk school faces the future. ML&W. Winter 1955 35-42.
'". . . there is more need for folk schools than ever before."
617. CAMPBELL, JOHN C.
Future of the church and independent schools in our Southern Highlands. New
York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1917. 19p.
618. CAMPBELL, OLIVE
Southern mountain schools maintained by denominational and independent
agencies. New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1929. 16p.
A list of "those schools which exist primarily for the southern mountaineer
and which are carried on under other than private auspices."
619. DUNN, FANNIE W.
The work of private schools in the South. MLirW. Jl 1933 13-20.
620. FINNEY, RAYMOND ALFRED
History of private educational institutions of Franklin County, Tennessee.
Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1939.
621. JASPER, MARY K.
Social value of settlement schools in the Kentucky mountains. Thesis. Uni-
versity of Kentucky. 1930.
622. STUART, JESSE
A freshman at Fishbone. American Mercury 28:153-57 1933.
A highly critical account of education in a mountain college. A reply to the
above in the same journal, My 1933 117.
623. STUART, JESSE
Leave the mountaineers alone. A^a' Republic 78:366 1934
624. WALLER, EUGENE C.
A survey of the church and independent schools and colleges of the Southern
Appalachians. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1931.
625. WALTERS, ROY N.
A study of private secondary schools in southeastern Kentucky. Nashville, Ten-
nessee: George Peabody College for Teachers, 1957. 54p. proc.
626. WITHOFT, MABEL S.
Oak and laurel, a study of the mountain mission schools of Southern Baptists.
Nashville: Southern Baptist Convention, 1923. 155p.
Gives a short description of each of the mission schools.
627. WOOD, HARRIETTE
The need for guidance programs in privately supported mountain schools.
Richmond: Southern Woman's Educational Alliance, 1933. 127p. proc.
BEREA
628. FROST, WILLIAM G.
For the mountains; an autobiography, New York: F. H. Revell Co., 1937. 352p.
The greater part of the book is devoted to Frost's work as President of Berea
College. Written in the third person.
629. MORGAN, CHARLES T.
The fruit of this tree. Kingsport, Tennessee: Kingsport Press, 1946. 269p.
An informal account of the history and educational philosophy of Berea College.
The author was Alumni Secretary of the College at the date of publication.
630. PECK, ELIZABETH
Berea's first century, 1855-1955. Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, 1955.
217p.
59
631. PRINGLE, HENRY FOWLES
School where nobody loafs. Saturday Evening Post May 2, 1953 22-23.
632. WOOLF, LEONARD
Berea, a unique example. School and Society 73:241-44 1951.
See Edwards items 444-79 for reference to Berea published prior to 1936.
BERRY SCHOOLS
633. BASSO, HAMILTON
About the Berry Schools; an open letter to Miss Martha Berry. New Republic
78:206-08 1934.
634. CHILDERS, JAMES S.
Sunday lady of Possum Trot. Readers Digest Jl 1954 55-58.
635. KANE, HARNETT T.
Miracle in the mountains. New York: Doubleday, 1956 320p.
"The inspiring story of Martha Berry's crusade for the mountain people of the
South."
636. One woman's vision. American Forests F 1954 12-13.
Photographs of student activities at the Berry School.
See Edwards items 480-507 for references to the Berry Schools published prior
to 1936.
HIGHLANDER FOLK SCHOOL
637. ALEXANDER, E. H.
Highlander school unmasked. American Mercury Jl 1959 149-50.
638. CLARK, SEPTIMA AND MYLES HORTON
Statement of policy of the Highlander Folk School. Journal of Humaji Rela-
tions. Summer 1958 78-88.
639. THE HIGHLANDER CONTROVERSY
ML&W. Winter 1959 23-25.
A brief account of the preliminary hearing held in September 1959 on a peti-
tion to close the school.
640. HIGHLAND FOLK SCHOOL
The story of an educational center for working people, np, nd. (12p).
641. LEWIS, CLAUDIA
It takes courage and ingenuity. Progressive Educatio?r 17:387-92 1940.
641A. PARRIS, WENDALL A.
Highlander Folk School; an adult education school with a purpose. Negro
History Bulletin. 27:170 1958.
642. THOMAS, WINBURN T.
Folk school in jeopardy. Christian Century. 76: 1013-14 1959.
643. WAKEFIELD, DAN
Seige at Highlander. Nation 189:323-25 1959.
Description of the attempt to force the closing of the Highlander Folk School.
JOHN C. GAMPBELL FOLK SCHOOL
644. BROWNLEE, FREDERICK
The John C, Campbell Folk School, 1925-1952. Brasstown, 1952. 23p.
645. CAMPBELL, OLIVE
Adjustment to rural industrial change with special reference to mountain areas.
National Educational Association Proceedings 67:484-88 1929.
Discusses the work of the John C. Campbell Folk School.
60
646. CAMPBELL, OLIVE
I sing behind the plow. Journal of Adult Education 2:248-59 1930.
An analysis of educational activities in the Southern Appalachians in general
and of the John C. Campbell Folk School in particular.
648. COOLIDGE, RUTH
Vibrations from a Danish bell; the John C. Campbell Folk School at Brasstown,
N. C. American Scandinavian Review 33:107-17 1945.
OTHER SCHOOLS
649. BOND, SIRLIS O.
The light of the hills; a history of Salem College, Charleston: Educational
Foundation, 1960. 434p.
Salem is a Seventh Day Baptist College in Harrison County, West Virginia.
650. BRAILLER, FLOYD
How we do it at Madison. ML&W. Jl 1931 26-28.
Description of the Nashville Agricultural Normal Institute.
651. CESSANA, RALPH W.
College for Lincoln's kind. Christian Science Monitor Weekly Magazine. D 28.
1940 p7 + .
Lincoln Memorial University, Harrogate, Tennessee.
652. CLARK, EUNICE H.
A history of Traphill Institute, Wilkes County, North Carolina. Thesis. Appa-
lachian State Teachers College. 1954.
653. CLARK, H. T.
A history of Mountain View School, Wilkes County, North Carolina. Thesis.
Appalachian State Teachers College. 1953.
654. DORRIS, JONATHAN T.
Five decades of progress; Eastern Kentucky State College, 1906-1957. Richmond,
Kentucky: The College, 358p.
655. DUTTON, WILLIAM S.
Stay on, stranger. New York: Farrar, Straus & Young, 1954. 79p.
An account of Alice Lloyd and her efforts to build a school in the Kentucky
Mountains. The school, now known as Caney Junior College, is located at
Pippapass, Kentucky.
656. FOLMSBEE, STANLEY J.
East Tennessee University, 1840-1879, predecessor of the University of Ten-
nessee. Knoxville: University of Tennessee, 1959. 143p. (University of Tennes-
see Record, 62:3).
657. FULLER, HUGH E.
Joseph Kentron and his Kingsley Seminary, Sullivan Co., Tennessee. Thesis.
ETSC. 1953.
658. FURMAN, LUCY
Quare women: a story of the Kentucky Mountains. Boston: Atlantic Monthly,
1923, 319p.
"The atmosphere of this story, its background, and even many of its incidents
arise from the author's connection with the Hindman Settlement School in
Knotts County, Kentucky."
659. KENT, GEORGE
Campus in the clouds. Progressive Education, 18:369-72 1941.
(Condensed version appeared in Readers Digest N 1941 49-52).
61
660. HATCHER, O. LATHAM
A Mountain School; a study made by the Southern Woman's Educational
Alliance and Konnarock Training School. Richmond: Garrett & Massie, 1930.
248p.
Konnarock Training School is a mountain mission school, located in Smyth
Co., Virginia.
661. KOCH, LUGIAN
Commonwealth College. Progressive Education 11:301-02 1934.
662. LYNN, DENISE D.
Ann Cobb. MLirW. Sum 1960. 50-54.
A tribute to Miss Cobb, a long-time teacher at the Hindman Settlement School.
663. MORGAN, LUCY
Gift from the hills. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1958. 314p.
The Penland School of Handicrafts. Penland, N. C.
664. OBENHAUS, VICTOR
Wholeness vs. holiness in the mountains, the Pleasant Hill Academy (Ten-
nessee). Religious Education 37:359-66 1942.
665. PAGE, A. A.
Pikesville College: its contribution to the educational and spiritual life of
eastern Kentucky. Filson Club Historical Quarterly. 31:23-27 1957.
666. PHILLIPS, WENDELL B.
I teach in a hick college. Atlantic Monthly. 149:327-32 1932.
Author is a member of the faculty of Piedmont College (Georgia).
667. PHILLIPS, WENDELL B.
Students in a hick college. Atlantic Monthly. 151:412-18 1933.
Piedmont College (Georgia).
668. PINE MOUNTAIN SETTLEMENT SCHOOL
Findings of the Pine Mountain Guidance Institute, held at Pine Mountain,
Harlan County, Kentucky. August 20-26, 1939. 31 p.
669. RANDOLPH, H. S.
The Ashville Farm School— pioneers in educational method. MLirW. O 1932
16-20.
670. RICE, SIDNEY W.
A wilderness road led to destiny. Southerner. 1:22-25 D 1949.
Lincoln Memorial University, Harrogate, Tennessee.
671. RITCHIE, ANDREW J.
The Rabun Industrial School and mountain school extension work among the
mountain whites. Atlanta: Byrd, 1906. 40p.
Author was founder of the school, which is located at Rabun Gap, Georgia.
672. SCHOOLS FOR THE MOUNTAINEER (EDIT).
New Republic. 78:202-03 1934.
672A. STOVALL, HENRY
Farmer's day and work camp at Hazel Green. MLirW. Spring 1944 30-34.
Hazel Green Academy, Hazel Green, Kentucky.
673. STUART, JESSE
Lesson in a liberal college education. Saturday Review of Literature. F 16, 1946
26-27.
Description of Stuart's experience in the creative writing class at Lincoln
Memorial University.
673A. TEMPLE, WAYNE C.
Lincoln Memorial University. MLirL. Winter 1960 53-55.
62
674. UMBARGER, CATHERINE C.
Konnarock— an experiment in education. ML&W. Ap 1930 2-6.
Description of the Konnarock Training School in the mountains of Virginia.
675. VOGEL, JOHN
This happened in the hills of Kentucky. Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1952. 382p.
Vogel is founder and director of the Galilean Children's Home Corbin, Ken-
tucky.
SCHOOL AND COMMUNITY
676. ADDINGTON, VIOLET WALTERS
A study of home-school contacts and attitudes toward participation in Lincoln
School, Kingsport, Tennessee. Thesis. ETSC. 1957.
677. CLAPP, ELSIE R.
Community schools in action, New York: Viking, 1939. 429p.
Study of two experimental rural schools; one in Arthurdale, West Virginia,
and the other in Jefferson County, Kentucky.
678. DIEHL, JAMES A.
A proposed program of public relations for the schools of Mason County, West
Virginia. Thesis. Ohio University. 1954.
679. EVANS, IRVIN C.
A study of 20 parents in Carter County, Tennessee selected as the best partners-
in-instruction. Thesis. ETSC. 1952.
680. KING, HOWARD M.
What citizens of Sullivan County know about their schools. Thesis. ETSC. 1952.
681. McKINNEY, ZEYLAND
The country farm-life schools of North Carolina. Thesis. Appalachian State
Teachers College. 1953.
682. MILLER, DELMAS F.
A survey of the public relations programs of West Virginia high schools.
Thesis. West Virginia University. 1934.
683. MONTGOMERY, CHARLES
Community uses of public school buildings in West Virginia. Thesis. West
Virginia University. 1934.
684. MOYER, EGBERT
The status of public relations activities in the secondary schools of Greene
County, Tennessee. Thesis. ETSC. 1956.
685. MYERS, JERRY C.
What the patrons of the elementary school of Bristol, Tennessee, think about
their schools. Thesis. ETSC. 1957.
686. OSBORNE, JAMES T.
Community use of school resources in Cherokee County, North Carolina, as
compared with a national trend. Thesis. University of North Carolina. 1950.
687. ROBINETTE, FRANK L.
What the eighth grade patrons of Scott County think about their schools.
Thesis. ETSC. 1957.
688. STOUT, RALPH E.
What citizens of Carter County know about their schools. Thesis. ETSC. 1953.
689. STRANG. RUTH
Planning with and for youth in a rural-industrial community. Nation's School.
Ja 1949 41-43.
Describes the activities of the Alliance for Guidance of Rural Youth in Harlan
County, Kentucky. Program required the cooperation of local school officials
and community leaders.
63
690. WILSON, L. CRAIG AND OTHERS
School-community improvement; a report of the Greenbrier County program.
New York: World Book Company, 1959. 350p.
An intensive study of school-community relations in Greenbrier County, West
Virginia.
TEACHERS AND OTHER SCHOOL PERSONNEL
691. AMBROSE, L. M.
Teachers for Kentucky mountain rural schools. Kentucky School Journal. O 1942
37-40.
692. BONAR, ROSS
The status of the secondary school principal of West Virginia during the years
1935-36. Thesis. West Virginia University, 1937.
693. BRUCKER, ELIZABETH C.
A survey of the status of the retired school teacher in W 7 est Virginia. Thesis.
Marshall College. 1952.
694. COGER, WILLIAM N.
A study of administrative and supervisory practices of principals in the public
school system of Jefferson County, Alabama. Thesis. Alabama State College. 1954.
695. CRADDOCK, ERNEST B.
A study of the status of the elementary principal of Logan County, West Vir-
ginia. Thesis. Marshall College. 1954.
696. DURR, WILLIAM H.
The status of school board members of West Virginia. Thesis. West Virginia
University. 1940.
697. DILLOW, NOLA M.
The qualifications and instructional program of 100 elementary geography
teachers in northeastern Tennessee. Thesis. ETSC. 1952.
698. EVERNDEN, WILLIAM L.
The professional status of teachers in the Southern Appalachian region. Ed.D.
University of Tennessee. 1960.
699. GRAY, WAYNE T.
Factors affecting teacher tenure in the Appalachian Highlands. Rural Sociology.
13:295-307 1948.
700. HAYNES, ADAM A.
The background, education, and experience of teachers in Rutherford County,
North Carolina. Thesis. Furman University. 1954.
701. KEEBLER, ALLEEN S.
Problems of beginning teachers in Washington County, Tennessee. Thesis.
ETSC. 1955.
702. KEYS, ROBERT KENNETH
Some problems concerning the relations of administrators and beginning teachers
in the Washington County School System, 1955-56. Thesis. ETSC. 1957.
703. Mcculloch, jack d.
A study of the status of rural teachers in East Tennessee. Thesis. ETSC. 1951.
704. MASON, CHARLES D.
A survey of the training and experience of secondary principals in five upper
east Tennessee counties. Thesis. ETSC. 1957.
705. MERINAR, ELMER K.
A study of the status of the elementary school principal of West Virginia. Thesis.
West Virginia University. 1933.
64
706 * r V compariton LI ^ E paren.s and teachers viewpoints relative to teacher com-
petencies in Johnson City, Tennessee. Thesis. Tennessee Agricultural & In-
dustrial University. 1952.
707. SEAY, MAURICE F.
Nepotism in the Kentucky mountain school. ML&W. O l'J34 lb-18.
707 \ STANBERRY, THOMAS W. . , _
The economic status of Knox County teachers. Thesis. University of Tennes-
see. 1959.
708 TAYLOR, TAMES M. .„ _ _ t , _
' Teachers attitudes toward their profession in Greenville County, South Caro-
lina. Thesis. Furman University. 1952.
7 ° 9 ' T^SracumraS? activities of teachers of Greenville County, South Carolina.
Thesis. Furman University. 1952.
LIBRARIES
710 ' Libmdef oSSfa report on developments, 1930-1935. Chicago: American
Library Association, 1936. 215p.
711. BARKER, TOMMIE D.
Library facilities in the Southern Appalachians. ML&Vl . Jl 1932 14-1/.
712 ' SookSte^o^services in eastern Kentucky. Thesis. Columbia University. 1940.
712A. BOOKMOBILES BRING MOHAMMED TO THE MOUNTAINS
ML&W. Summer 1959 5-8.
Describes the introduction of bookmobiles in the Kentucky mountains.
713. BROWN, KENNETH „..-,•, n 1Q ^ 9 *
West Virginia's second regional library. West Virginia Libraries. D 1955 2-4.
Discussion of the planning required before establishing a regional library in an
area hitherto without library service.
714. BULLEN, ROBERT W. . „ . .., t v ,,.
Survey for library development in Fayette and Raleigh Counties, West Vir-
ginia. Charleston: West Virginia Library Commission, 1959. 50p. proc.
715. CRIMMINS, NORA _ n
Rural library service for Hamilton County, Tennessee. MLvW. Ap 1932 ^8-30.
716. EDWARDS, DOROTHY
Romance of Kentucky libraries. Wtfcow Library Bulletin 17:293-9j 194^.
Kentucky packhorse libraries.
717. EDWARDS, EVELYN LORRAINE .
The reading habits of 200 adults in Kingsport, Iennessee. Thesis. E1SC. Uob.
718. HOWARD, MONTICE BISSINGER
A study of the use of student library assistants in the secondary schools ot Last
Tennessee. Thesis. ETSC. 1958.
719 HUMBLE, MARION
In the Kentucky mountains. Journal of Adult Education 1L6/-68 1939.
Reading habits and pack-horse libraries in Jackson County, Kentucky.
720. LENSKI, LOIS . . . „.,. an 1Q , r
Christmas at Huckleberry Mountain Library. Horn Book. 22:475-80 iy4b.
Description of the "only rural library in Henderson County, North Carolina."
65
721. LOWE, CORNELIA
Initiating the rural library program in Towns and Union Counties, Georgia.
Thesis. University of Georgia. 1948.
722. MILLS, JOSEPHINE J.
An investigation of the reading interest of the junior high school students in
Greeneville, Tennessee. Thesis. ETSC. 1954.
723. PACK HORSE LIBRARY. Rural America. O 1939 11-12.
Description of the pack horse libraries in the mountains of Kentucky.
724. POUNDSTONE, SALLY
A plan for regional library development in eastern Kentucky. Thesis. Uni-
versity of Kentucky. 1955.
725. ROTHROCK, MARY U.
Books for everybody. ML&W. Ap 1932. 10-13.
Knox County, Tennessee.
725A. TENNESSEE. LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL COMMITTEE
Public library service study. Final report. Nashville, 1960. 61 numbered pages,
plus appendices.
Gives much useful statistical information by county.
726. THOMAS, HELEN WEBB
A survey of library services in the county schools of Sullivan County, Ten-
nessee. Thesis. ETSC. 1958.
727. WILLIAMS, BERTHA L.
A survey of school library facilities anil services in four selected high schools
in Jefferson County, Alabama. Thesis. Alabama State College. 1954.
728. WILSON, LOUIS R. AND EDWARD A. WIGHT
County library service in the South. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1935.
259p. '
Several of the demonstration counties used as a base for this study are in the
Southern Appalachian region.
MISCELLANEOUS
729. AKINS, ENOS E.
Disciplinary beliefs and practices of selected East Tennessee high school prin-
cipals. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1957.
730. ANGLIN, FRANCES B.
A follow-up study of graduates of Roane County High School, 1946-55. Thesis.
University of Tennessee. 1956.
731. BAILEY, CHARLOTTE P.
A study of the development of special education in Claiborne County. Thesis.
ETSC. 1958.
732. BARKLEY, ANNA M.
Local history stories for the third grade, Washington and Sullivan Counties,
Tennessee. Thesis. ETSC. 1952.
733. BARRY, HELEN B.
A study of special services in the schools of Greenville County, South Carolina.
Thesis. Furman University. 1954.
734. BENSCHOTEN, J. A.
Just to read and write. World's Work. D 1930 77-80.
Account of the work of the moonlight schools.
66
735. BRUNNER, EDMUND
Community organization and adult education, a five year experiment. Chapel
Hill: University of Nortli Carolina Press, 1942. 124p.
Experiment was conducted by the Greenville County (S.C.) Council Eor Com-
munity Development.
735A. BYAR. THOMAS M.
The student population in the institutions of higher education in the Southern
Appalachian region, 1933-1958. Ed.D. University of Tennessee. 1959.
736. CARNEY, MABEL
Mountain welfare and the public school. MLirW . Jl 1927 28-35.
737. COOK, JOHN H.
A study of the mill schools of North Carolina. New York: Columbia University,
1925. 55p. (Teachers College Contributions to Education 178).
738. COOK, NASH
A survey of the school lunch program in Boone County, (West Virginia)
schools. Thesis. Marshall College. 1952.
739. CYR, FRANK W.
Curriculum enrichment and redirection of rural secondary schools in the moun-
tain area. ML&W. Jl 1935 8-16.
710. DARNELL, HAROLD L.
A study of the problems of sixth grade students in selected schools of Scott
County, Virginia. Thesis. ETSC. 1957.
741. DAY, DELLA M.
Buncombe County night schools carry on| ML&W. Ap 1933 7-11.
741A. DELOZIER, ROBERT C.
Public school enrollment prediction for the Southern Appalachian region.
Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1959.
742. GAUMNITZ, WALTER H.
Responsibility of the school for underpriviledged children. Journal of Educa-
tional Sociology 17:223-29. 1943.
"A very important underpriviledged area is that typified by the southern moun-
tains."
713. GORE. NINA L.
The development of a plan for parent education for the speech handicapped
children in Overton County, Tennesssee. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1955.
744. GRINDSTAFF, DANA R.
A study of the program of vocational rehabilitalion in Carter County, Tennes-
see. Thesis. ETSC. 1953.
745. HANCOCK, HARRY L.
A study of school transportation, Bradley County. Tennessee. Thesis. Univer-
sity of Tennessee. 1953.
745A. HARLESS, N. R.
A study of school transportation, Blount County, Tennessee. Thesis. Universil\
of Tennessee. 1959.
746. HARLOW, ALVIN
Revolving hot lunch program. Educational Forum 6:367-72 1942.
Describes the activities of the Save the Children Federation in helping provide
school lunch programs for destitute mountain areas.
747. HATCHER, O. LATHAM
A guidance program for Breathitt County young people. ML&W. O 1934 19-22.
748. HATCHER, O. LATHAM
Some guidance needs of mountain boys and girls. ML&W. Ap 1931 8-13.
67
749. HEADRICK, WARREN B.
A study of the physical plants of Blount County high schools. Thesis. Uni-
versity of Tennessee. 1952.
750. HENDERSON, HELEN R.
A curriculum study in a mountain district. New York: Columbia University,
1937. 189p. (Teachers College Contributions to Education 732).
Study was made in Buchanan County, Virginia.
751. HOLDEN, ANNA AND OTHERS
Clinton, Tennessee, a tentative description and analysis of the school desegre-
gation crisis. New York: Anti-Defamation League, 1957. 24p.
752. HUGHES, FRANK G.
A study of the school buildings of McMinn County. Thesis. University of Ten-
nessee. 1958.
753. HURST, OTIS C.
Trends in the social studies in eighty Tennessee high schools, 1931-1952. Thesis.
ETSC. 1952.
754. INNES, THOMAS C.
A study of some problems of eighth grade students of John Sevier Junior
High School, Kingsport, Tennessee. Thesis. ETSC. 1957.
755. IRWIN, FRANK E.
A study of school transportation, Anderson County, Tennessee. Thesis. Uni-
versity of Tennessee. 1958.
755A. JOHNSON, PAUL M.
Integration in West Virginia since 1954. Thesis. West Virginia University. 1960.
756. JONES, WILLIAM
Environmental school sanitation of an eastern Kentucky county. Thesis. Uni-
versity of Kentucky. 1954.
757. LINKINOGGER, JESSIE V.
The effect of promotion and non-promotion upon the subsequent success or
failure in Richmond School, Clay County (West Virginia). Thesis. Marshall
College. 1952.
758. McELROY, DON DEAN
A comparative analysis of the results of the Kraus-Weber Test for minimum
muscular fitness in four of the elementarv schools of Johnson City, Tennessee.
Thesis. ETSC. 1957.
759. McKINNEY, LAVONIA
Factors affecting the health and educational growth of elementary pupils in
three selected schools of Jefferson County, Alabama. Thesis. Alabama State
College. 1952.
759A. MARION, LEONARD M.
A guidance program for the schools of Hawkins County. Thesis. University of
Tennessee. 1959.
760. MATHES, WILETA
A study of problems of junior high school students of Johnson City, Tennessee.
Thesis. ETSC. 1953.
761. MENEFEE, ROBERT G.
The Supreme Court decision and the Appalachian South. New South O 1954
1-11.
762. MILLER, DONALD W.
Vocational education in the southern mountains. Education 50:429-31 1930.
Plea for improved programs of vocational education.
68
763. MONTGOMERY, ERNEST B.
Some factors affecting retardation in the six high schools of Washington County,
Tennessee. Thesis. ETSC. 1952.
764. ORR, THOMAS B.
A follow-up of 1952 graduates of Logan High School, Logan, West Virginia.
Thesis. Marshall College. 1953.
765. PERDUE, MABEL J.
The relation of the hot lunch program to the progress of pupils in the Deep
Water School, West Virginia. Thesis. Marshall College. 1952.
766. PETTIGREW, THOMAS F.
Demographic correlations of border-state desegregation. American Sociological
Review 22:683-89. 1957.
A study of the pattern of acceptance of public school integration in selected
Missouri and Kentucky counties.
767. POWELL, HANNAH J.
Pioneer night school. ML&W. O 1929. 11-12.
North Carolina mountains.
768. RAINES, CARROLL C.
A study of school transportation, Hawkins County, Tennessee. Thesis. Uni-
versity of Tennessee. 1954.
769. RAMEY, JAMES M.
Factors influencing social status, social participation, and social reputation of
the children in the elementary school of Crum, West Virginia. Thesis. Marshall
College. 1953.
770. REYNOLDS, RUTH ALLEN
A proposed health instruction program for upper elementary grades adaptable
to Carter County. Thesis. ETSC. 1956.
771. ROMAGNOLI, ALFONSO L.
Worker education in West Virginia; a study of union-university cooperation.
Thesis. West Virginia University. 1957.
772. SANDERS, RETTA E.
A survev of Boone County (West Virginia) school buildings. Thesis. Marshall
College/ 1952.
722A. SELLS, CECIL O.
A study of pupil transportation in Polk County, Tennessee. Thesis. Tennessee
Polytechnic. 1959.
773. SLONE, ALICE H.
We build a school. Practical Home Economics. 20:435-36 1942.
Lotts Creek Community School, Knott County, Kentucky.
774. SMITH, NENA G.
The relationship between reading capacity and reading achievement of 123
third grade children of Morristown and Hamblen County, Tennessee. Thesis.
Tennessee Agricultural & Industrial University. 1952.
775. STEWART, CORA W.
Moonlight schools for the emancipation of adult illiterates. New York: Dutton,
1922. 194p.
The author was the founder of moonlight school movement.
776. STONECIPHER, E. E.
Hog killing time in Tennessee. Progressive Education. 20:23-25 1943.
Describes efforts of a mountain school to relate educational and practical
experience. "Hog killing time" was used as a unit of study.
69
777. STRUNK, FLONNIE
A study of pupil transportation in Scott County, Tennessee. Thesis. University
of Tennessee. 1956.
778. STUMP, ROY J.
The effects of school hus transportation upon the achievement of students in
Calhoun County High School. Thesis. West Virginia University. 1942.
779. SWOPE, PAUL W.
Pupil transportation in West Virginia, 1934-1955. Thesis. Marshall College. 1957.
779A. TAYLOR, ALVA W.
What hot lunches do for mountain school children. ML&W. Spring 1944 15-18.
780. TURNER, BYRON J.
What parents in two Lewis County communities think about the transportation
of their children to a consolidated school. Thesis. West Virginia University.
1940.
780A. WEIR, DONALD E.
A guidance program for McMinn County High School. Thesis. University of
Tennessee. 1959.
781. WILDASIN, FRANCES W.
An analysis of problems of eighth and ninth grade students in the junior high
school of Johnson City, Tennessee. Thesis. ETSC. 1952.
782. WILLIAMS, DREW B.
A study of pupil transportation in Hancock County, Tennessee. Thesis. Uni-
versity of Tennessee. 1953.
783. WILSON, ISABELLA
Determining objectives for homemaking instruction. New York: Columbia Uni-
versity, 1935 99p.
'"The instruction of white students in the junior high scliools of the bituminous
coal fields of southern West Virginia."
783A. YOUMANS, E. GRANT
Factors in educational attainment. Rural Sociology. 24:21-28 1959.
Study of 439 youths from three low income farming areas in Kentucky.
784. ZUMSTEIN, WILLIAM C.
A study of school transportation, Morgan County, Tennessee. Thesis. Univer-
sity of Tennessee. 1953.
70
Agriculture
This listing is confined almost entirely to the economic and sociological aspects
of agr culture. Titles dealing with the science and technology of agriculture
have been excluded as being beyond the scope of this work. Such material
Is welMnde^ed and may be approached through such standard tools as
Agricultural Index and the Bibliography oj Agriculture.
?85 - ^St^ange^n agriculture of Cumberland County, Tennessee. Tennessee
Agricultural Experiment Station. Monograph 139. 194^.
786 ' Odgir a nd L Sl P atkm to agriculture of industrial workers in Kingsport, Tennes-
see. Journal of Farm Eco>w>nics. 38:828-36 l<b6.
787. AMBROSE, LUTHER
"Bucking" the depression. ML&W. Ja 1933 14-18.
\dvocates the raising of goats in the coal camps and very mountainous areas
as the only practical way of obtaining an adequate supply ot milk.
?88 ' Ru^deTd^Vnelu^^oblems and prospects in Fayette Raleigh and Summers
Counties. West Virginia. West Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station.
Bulletin 444, 1960. 21p.
789 ' L™Sng S h^om E e^ through farm adjustments in the Red Soil area. Eastern
Highland rim of Tennessee. Tennessee Agricultural Experiment Station. Bul-
letin 245, 1955. 66p.
790 ' Cons^ition projects by community organizations in Tennessee and other
southeastern states. Ph.D. Cornell University. I960.
791 BONDURVNT, 1. H. and W. D. NICHOLLS
Labor supply and farm production on eastern Kentucky farms. Kentucky
Agriculture Experiment Station. Bulletin 475, 1945. 24p.
79^ BONSER. HOWARD J. _
Better farming practices through rural community organization. Tennessee
Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 286, 19;>8. 36p.
"This is a study of rural community improvement clubs in East Tennessee
and their impact on the adoption of certain recommended farming practices.
793. BONSER. HOWARD J. AND J. F. DAVIS
Electricity on farms and in rural homes in the East Tennessee Valley. Tennes-
see Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 221, 1951.
7H1. BRASINGTON, CLAYTON F.
Livestock auction markets in the Appalachian area; methods and facilities.
Washington: GPO, 1959. 75p. (USDA Marketing Research Report 309).
794A. BREEDING, CLARENCE H.
\pnraisal of vocational education in agriculture in Clairborne County by
business and professional leaders. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1959.
795. CAROTHERS. J. EDWIN .
Poverty stalks the small farmer. ML&W. Winter 19o5 1/19-
7'>6 CLAYTON C. F. AND W. D. NICHOLLS
Land utilization in Laurel County, Kentuckv. Washington: GPO, 1932. lOOp.
(USDA Technical Bulletin 289.)
71
* I
797. COUGHENOUR, C. M. AND JOHN R. CHRISTIANSEN
Kentucky farmers and social security. Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station.
Progress Report 44, 1956. 21 p. proc.
Farmers in two mountain counties were less frequently protected by Social
Security and were less well informed concerning benefits than those in one non-
mountain county.
798. DESGHAMPS, ALFRED J.
Land use in Powell County, Kentucky. Thesis. University of Kentucky. 1954.
799. DURAND, LOYAL AND E. T. BIRD
The Burley tobacco region of the mountain south. Economic Geography. 26:247-
300 1950.
799A. EVANS, HOMER C. AND OTHERS
Some effects of price and income support programs on marginal farms. West
Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 451, 1961. 35p.
Authors conclude that price and income support programs are of relatively
little help to the marginal farmer. Second phase of this study will "examine
in detail the direct effects of programs on the Appalachian Area farmers."
800. FRANK, BERNARD AND ROBERT L. REID
Soil erosion in a mountain county. American Forests. 42:310-12 1936.
Cocke County, Tennessee.
801. GALLOWAY, ROBERT E.
Part-time farming in eastern Kentucky. Kentucky Agricultural Experiment
Station. Bulletin 646, 1956, 28p.
801A. GAULT, THOMAS G.
Rural land use in Franklin County, Tennessee. Ed.D. George Peabody College.
1959.
802. GIBSON, W. L. AND FARRAR V. SHELTON
Economic land classification of Pulaski County. Virginia Agricultural Experi-
ment Station. Bulletin 398, 1946. 12p.
803. GLENDINNING, R. M. AND E. N. TORBERT
Agricultural problems in Grainger County, Tennessee, Economic Geography.
14:159-166 1938.
803A. GOOCH, ERNEST D. AND C. D. PHILLIPS
Changes in the market movement of Kentucky livestock. Kentucky Agricultural
Experiment Station. Bulletin 672, 1960.
The state, for the purposes of this study, was divided into nine market areas.
Much statistical data is included.
804. GRISSO, ROBERT D. AND JOSEPH M. JOHNSON
Elements of success in marketing Appalachian apples. Virginia Agricultural
Experiment Station. Bulletin 507, 1959. 43p.
804A. HILL, JAMES E.
The strawberry industry in the hilly and mountainous regions of Tennessee.
Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1959.
805. HINTON, BRUCE
Significant factors influencing quality and success of supervised farming pro-
grams of vocational agriculture students in seven schools of East Tennessee.
Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1958.
806. HUGHES, R. B. JR.
Marginal returns on agricultural resources in a southern mountain valley.
Journal of Farm Economics. 36:334-39 1954.
Study centered in Greene County, Tennessee.
807. JENSEN, HARALD R. AND LUTHER KELLER
A general picture of commercial agriculture in eastern Kentucky. Kentucky
Agricultural Experiment Station. Progress Report 60, 1957. I7p. proc.
808. JOHNSON, JACK D.
Economic factors affecting cattle prices at Appalachian auctions. Ph.D. Iowa
State University. 1958.
Covers auctions in East Tennessee, Virginia and West Virginia.
809. KINARD, J. D. AND M. J. PETERSON
Farm business study of the six mile area of Pickins County 1940. South Caro-
lina Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 340, 1942.
810. LANCASTER, J. L.
Some economic aspects of the changes in Towns County agriculture during the
period 1934-1950. Thesis. University of Georgia. 1952.
811. LANHAM, B. F. Jr. AND W. V. LAGRONE
Increasing incomes and conserving resources on cotton-corn farms in Marion
County. Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 25G, 1942.
812. LEMONS, JAMES
A study of the working relationships of the agricultural extension service and
the vocational agricultural program in East Tennessee. Thesis. University of
Tennessee. 1958.
813. LINDSEY, QUENTIN W.
Farm tenure; the framework for long-run adjustments in southeastern agri-
culture, North Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station. Technical Bulletin
110, 1954. 54p.
Appears also as Publication 13 of the Southeast Land Tenure Research Com-
mittee.
814. LONG, E. J. AND P. DORNER
Excess farm population and the loss of agricultural capital. Land Economics
30:363-68 1954.
Study deal with rural Tennessee.
815. McCLURE, JAMES G. K.
Ten years of the Farmers Federation. ML&W. Ap 1931 23-25.
Account of cooperative operating in the mountain counties of North Carolina.
816. MALONEY, FORREST B.
The rural land-use of Washington County, Tennessee. Thesis. University of
Tennessee. 1956.
817. MARTIN, LEE R. AND OTHERS
The effects of different levels of management and capital on the incomes of
small farmers in the South. Journal of Farm Eco>wmics 42:90-102 1960.
Study deals with Macon County, North Carolina.
818. MASON, JOHN E. AND G. W. FORESTER
Inventory of land use in North Carolina. North Carolina Agricultural Experi-
ment Station. Technical Bulletin 93, 1950. 42p.
Arranged by county.
819. MORGAN, E. L AND T. N. GEARREALD
Farmer cooperation in southwest Virginia. Virginia Agricultural Experiment
Station. Bulletin 331, 1941. 46p.
820. NICHOLLS, W. D. AND W. L. ROUSE
Family incomes and land utilization in Knott County, Kentucky. Kentucky
Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 375, 1937.
73
821. NICHOLLS, W. D. AND JOHN H. BONDURANT
Farm management and family incomes in eastern Kentucky. Kentucky Agri-
cultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 491, 1946. 75p.
"A study of farm production, use of farm land, incomes, and family labor
supply on 74 farms in the Breathitt Area."
822. NICHOLLS, WILLIAM H.
The effects of industrial development on Tennessee Valley agriculture. Journal
of Farm Economics 38:1636-49 1956.
823. NICHOLLS. WILLIAM H.
Factors affecting gross farm income per worker, Upper East Tennessee Valley,
1899-1954. Journal of Farm Economics 42:356-62 1960.
824. PARMAN, GUY D.
Geographic factors in the land use of Greene County, Tennessee. Thesis. ETSC.
1954.
825. PARRISH, EARL LESLIE
Land utilization in Roane County, Tennessee. Thesis. University of Tennessee.
1951.
826. PATTESON, G. W. AND OTHERS
Classification of land ownership in Bedford County. Virginia Agricultural
Experiment Station. Bulletin 500, 1958. 26p.
827. PATTESON, G. W. AND OTHERS
Classification of land ownership in Rockbridge County. Virginia Agricultural
Experiment Station. Bulletin 510, 1959. 29p.
828. PATTESON, G. W. AND J. A. McCARTNEY
Economic land classification of Augusta County. Virginia Agricultural Experi-
ment Station. Bulletin 377, 1945. lOp.
829. PATTESON, G. W. AND Z. M. K. FULTON
Economic land classification of Bath County. Virginia Agricultural Experiment
Station. Bulletin 447, 1952. 19p.
830. PATTESON, G. W. AND J. A. McCARTNEY
Economic land classification of Botetourt County. Virginia Agricultural Experi-
ment Station. Bulletin 385, 1945. 9p.
831. PATTESON, G. K. AND Z. M. K. FULTON
Economic land classification of Carroll County. Virginia Agricultural Experi-
ment Station. Bulletin 442, 1950. 19p.
832. PATTESON, G. W. AND A. J. HARRIS
Economic land classification of Clarke County. Virginia Agricultural Experi-
ment Station. Bulletin 448, 1952. 18p.
833. PATTESON, G. W. AND A. J. HARRIS
Economic land classification of Culpeper County. Virginia Agricultural Experi-
ment Station. Bulletin 379, 1945. 7p.
834. PATTESON, G. W. AND Z. M. K. FULTON
Economic land classification of Grayson County. Virginia Agricultural Experi-
ment Station. Bulletin 392, 1946. 8p.
835. PATTESON, G. W. AND FARRAR V. SHELTON
Economic land classification of Greene County. Virginia Agricultural Experi-
ment Station. Bulletin 372, 1945. lOp.
836. PATTESON, G. W. AND S. C. SHULL
Economic land classification of Loudoun County. Virginia Agricultural Experi-
ment Station. Bulletin 387, 1946. 8p.
837. PATTESON, G. W. AND S. C. SHULL
Economic land classification of Shenandoah County. Virginia Agricultural
Experiment Station. Bulletin 376, 1945. 7p.
74
838. PATTESON, G. W. AND Z. M. K. FULTON
Economic land classification of Smyth County, Virginia Agricultural Experi-
ment Station. Bulletin 446, 1951. 18p.
839. PATTESON, G. W. AND Z. M. K. FULTON
Economic land classification of Wythe County. Virginia Agricultural Experi-
ment Station. Bulletin 422, 1949. 20p.
840. PECK, MILLARD AND OTHERS
Economic utilization of marginal lands in Nicholas and Webster Counties, West
Virginia. Washington: GPO, 1932. 64p. (USDA Technical Bulletin 303).
841. PECK, MILLARD
Farm or forest in the West Virginia Appalachians. Journal of Farm Economics
11:422-35 1929.
842. RUTTAN, VERNON W.
The impact of urban-industrial development on agriculture in the Tennessee
Valley and the Southeast. Journal of Farm Economics 37:38-50 1955.
843. SINGH, HAR S.
Evaluation of alternative income opportunities for farm operators in Macon
County, North Carolina. Ph.D. North Carolina State College. 1959.
844. SMITH, DICK W.
Economic levels of forage and grain production on dairy farms in East Ten-
nessee. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1956.
845. SMITH, J. RUSSELL
Farming Appalachia. American Review of Reviews. 53:329-36 1916.
"The point of this interesting and informing tale is that we should teach our
mountain farmer true mountain agriculture" (as in Corsica).
846. SPILLMAN, CLAUDE O.
The relationship of the economic production of farmers of the southern Appa-
lachian region to certain social factors. Ph.D. University of Kentucky. 1939.
847. TANG, ANTHONY M.
Economic development in the Southern Piedmont 1860-1950; its impact on
agriculture. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1958. 256p.
848. VERNON, J. J|
Economic study of the organization and management of beef cattle and other
types of farms in Russell County. Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station.
Technical Bulletin 71, 1941. 186p.
849. VERNON, J. J. AND OTHERS
Study of the organization and management of farmers in Grayson County, Vir-
ginia. Virginia Agricultural Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 304, 1936.
850. VERNON, J. J.
Why some farmers are more successful than others. Virginia Agricultural
Experiment Station. Bulletin 341, 1942. 19p.
Study made in Russell County, Virginia.
851. WEITZELL, E. C.
Certain economic aspects of agriculture in Jackson County soil conservation
area. West Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 291, 1939. 56p.
852. WELCH, FRANK J.
Helping low income farm families. ML&W. Winter 1955 20-27.
853. WHEELER, JESSE H.
Land use in Greenbrier County, West Virginia. Ph.D. University of Chicago.
1950.
75
854. WOOFTER, T. J. Jr.
Rural relief and the Back-to-the-Farm-Movement. Social Forces. 14:382-88 1936.
"In the Appalachian-Ozark region 25 percent of the relief clients with previous
non-agricultural occupation were currently employed in Agriculture. . ."
FORESTRY
855. BENNETT, H. D.
Lessons in Appalachian forestry. Cincinnati: Appalachian Hardwood Manu-
facturers, Inc., 1950. 47p.
Written as a text for elementary and secondary schools. Attempts to present
"in plain non-technical language, a step-by-step story of the forests, forestry
and logging, and their relation to the people of the Appalachian Hardwood
Region."
856. BRITT, RAY T. AND JOE A. MARTIN
Marketing sawtimber and pulpwood. Tennessee Agricultural Experiment Sta-
tion. Bulletin 295, 1959. 27p.
Discussion based on records of 215 forest landowners in McMinn, Cumberland
and Hardin Counties, Tennessee.
857. CRAIG, RONALD B.
Forestry in the economic life of Knott County, Kentucky. Kentucky Agricul-
tural Experiment Station. Bulletin 326, 1932. 39p.
858. DOOLITTLE, WARREN T.
Site index comparisons for several forest species in the Southern Appalachians.
Soil Science Society of America. Proceedings 22:455-58 1958.
"This paper gives methods and results of a study of relationships of site indices
of 10 tree species common in the Southern Appalachians."
859. DUERR, WILLIAM A.
The economic problems of forestry in the Appalachian Region. Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 1949. 317p. (Harvard Economic Studies 84).
860. DUERR, WILLIAM A. AND OTHERS
Farms and forests of eastern Kentucky in relation to population and income.
Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 507, 1947. 56p.
861. DUERR, WILLIAM A. AND R. O. GUSTAFSON
Management of forests in an eastern Kentucky area. Kentucky Agricultural
Experiment Station. Bulletin 518. 1948. 122p.
Area studied consists of half-million acres in Breathitt, Knott and Perry counties.
862. DUERR, WILLIAM A. AND OTHERS
Timber-products marketing in eastern Kentucky. Kentucky Agricultural Experi-
ment Station. Bulletin 488, 1946. 95p.
863. KILBOURNE, RICHARD
Watershed improvement in the Tennessee Valley. Journal of Forestry 58:294-96
1960.
864. LEWIS, CHARLES D.
Government forests and the mountain problem. ML&W. Ja 1931 2-9.
865. NADLER, HARRY
The journey back to a "Green Gold" economy. ML&W. Winter 1959 45-49.
Author suggests that forestry and reforestation may be one of the solutions for
the declining economy of eastern Kentucky and other worked-out coal areas.
866. NORTH CAROLINA. Department of Conservation & Development. Division
of Forestry.
Sawmills and lumber production for 26 counties in western North Carolina.
1959. lip.
76
867. SHEA, JOHN P.
Our pappies burned the woods. American Forests 46:159-62 1940.
"As a psychologist I was supposed to find the 'inner-most' reason why inhabi-
tants of the forest lands of the South cling persistently to the custom of
burning the woods." Study conducted in the "southernmost spur of the Blue
Ridge Mountains."
868. TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY. Division of Forestry Relations.
Hardwood logging methods and cost in the Tennessee Valley. Norris, Tennessee,
1960. 35p.
869. UNITED STATES. Department of Agriculture.
Report of the Secretary of Agriculture in relation to the forests, rivers, and
mountains of the Southern Appalachian Region. Washington: GPO, 1902. 210p.
Extensive treatment of forests and lumbering practices of the time.
870. WEBB, GEORGE W.
The hardwood lumber industry of the eastern highland rim. Journal of the
Tennessee Academy of Sciences 32:216-27 1957.
871. WEITZELL, E. C. AND L. F. MILLER
Forest-land utilization in Nicholas and Webster Counties, West Virginia. West
Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 309, 1943. 66p.
77
Folklore, Customs, Music and Speech
The literature on the folklore, customs, crafts, music and speech of the Southern
Appalachians is enormous. Fortunately, this is also the area in which the
bibliographers have been the most active. Therefore, it seemed desirable to
limit this listing to (1) the more important contributions and (2) to those
which have not appeared in other bibliographies.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
872. HAYWOOD, CHARLES
A bibliography of North American folklore and folksong. New York: Green-
burg, 1951. 1292p.
This without question the best work in the field. It includes folkloie, music,
speech, art and customs. It is easy to use and is well-indexed. Pp. 236-289 are
devoted to "The South and Southern Highlands."
873. LAWLESS, RAY M.
Folksingers and folksongs in America. New York: Duel], Sloan and Co., I960.
662p.
Subtitle reads "a handbook of biography, bibliography and discography." In-
cludes biographies of singers, articles on folk-music instruments, noted collections
and collectors, a checklist of folksong titles, and a listing of long-playing records.
BIBLIOGRAPHY-CURRENT
874. Southern Folklore Quarterly: Folklore bibliography.
The March issue of the Southern Folklore Quarterly includes a comprehensive
bibliography of the titles in the field of folklore (including crafts and speech)
appearing during the preceeding year. International in scope.
FOLKLORE AND CUSTOMS
875. BOSHEARS, FRANCES
Proverbial comparisons from an east Tennessee county. Tennessee Folklore
Society. Bulletin 20:27-41 1954.
876. BOSHEARS, FRANCES
The Shivaree. Tennessee Folklore Society. Bulletin 19:65-67 1953.
"Describes this wedding custom in Scott and Morgan Counties, Tennessee."
877. BRUSH, FREDERICK
Hill doctor; tells in story and ballads, tales of the Appalachians. Selingsgrove,
Pa.: Susquehanna University Press, 1956. 142p.
878. CAMPBELL, MARIE
Festivals in a mountain community. Childhood Education. S 1939 25-28.
879. CAMPBELL, MARIE
Survivals of old folk drama in Kentucky mountains. Journal of American Folk-
lore. 51:10-24 1938.
880. CAMPBELL, MARIE
Tales from the cloud walking country. Bloomington: University of Indiana
Press, 1958. 270p.
78 tales recorded from the oral traditions of the eastern Kentucky mountains.
881. COBB, ANN
Kinfolks; Kentucky mountain rhymes. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1922. 82p.
882. COMBS. JOSIAH H.
Some Kentucky highland stories. Kentucky Folklore Record 4:45-61 1958.
883. CORNETT, ELIZABETH B.
Belief tales of Knott and Perry counties. Kentucky Folklore Record. 2:69-75 1956.
78
884. CREDLE, ELLIS
Tall tales from the high hills and other stories. New York: Thomas Nelson,
1957. 156p.
884A. ERNST, HARRY
Folk arts thrive in West Virginia schools. ML&W. 34:2 5-6 1958.
Discussion of the folk arts program in the schools of Logan County, W. Ya.
885. FARR, T. J.
Riddles and superstitions of middle Tennessee. Journal of American Folklore
48:18-36 1936.
"Collected in the mountain and semi-mountain region of Tennessee."
886. GLASSCOCK, MRS. H.
Wetzel County folklore. West Virginia Folklore. 5:21-40 1955.
887. HALL, JOSEPH S.
Bear-hunting stories from the Great Smokies. Tennessee Folklore Society.
Bulletin 23:67-75 1957.
"Texts of 4 anecdotes from western North Carolina."
888. HALPERT, HERBERT
East Tennessee question-and-answer tall tales. Tennessee Folklore Society.
Bulletin 18:101-03 1952.
889. Mcdowell, flora l.
Folk dances of Tennessee. Berea: Council of the Southern Mountains, 64p.
890. MATHES, C. HODGE
Tall tales from Old Smoky. Kingsport: Southern Publishers, 1952. 241p.
891. MUSICK, RUTH ANN
Barbour County folklore. West Virginia Folklore 6:40-51 1956.
892. MUSICK, RUTH ANN
Gilmer County folklore. West Virginia Folklore 10:51-68 1960.
893. MUSICK, RUTH ANN
Harrison County folklore. West Virginia Folklore 8:2-16 1958.
894. MUSICK, RUTH ANN
More stories of the mine. West Virginia Folklore 10:18-36 1960.
895. MUSICK, RUTH ANN
Roane County folklore. West Virginia Folklore 9:17-59 1959.
896. MUSICK, RUTH ANN
Stories about mines. West Virginia Folklore 8:54-68 1958.
897. ROBERTS, LEONARD
Floyd County folklore. Kentucky Folklore Record 2:33-66 1956.
898. ROBERTS, LEONARD
I bought me a dog. Berea: Council of the Southern Mountains, 1951, np,
A collection of "a dozen authentic folktales from the southern mountains."
899. ROBERTS, LEONARD
Nippy and the Yankee Doodle. Berea: Council of the Southern Mountains.
1958. np.
A collection of 10 folk tales from the southern mountains.
900. ROBERTS, LEONARD
Snick and snack; folktales from Wayne County, Kentucky. ML&W 36:43-47 1960.
901. ROBERTS, LEONARD
South from Hell-fer-Sartin. Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, 1955. 287p.
A collection of folk tales gathered from an isolated area in southern Kentucky.
902. ROGERS, E. G.
An East Tennessee collection of friendship verses. Tennessee Folklore Society.
Bulletin 23:13-25 1957.
903. ROGERS, E. G.
Some East Tennessee figurative exaggerations. Tennessee Folklore Society.
Bulletin 19:36-40 1953.
904. ROGERS, E. G.
Tall tales from Tennessee. Southern Folklore Quarterly 19:237-42 1955.
905. SMITH, FRANK H.
The Appalachian square dance. Rerea: Berea College, 1955. 86p.
"Contains a large collection of dance figures, calls and tunes, illustrated by
drawings and photographs."
906. SUTHERLAND, E. J.
Folk games from Frying Pan Creek in Dickenson County, Virginia. Southern
Folklore Quarterly 10:239-66 1946.
907. THOMAS, JEAN
Devil's ditties, being stories of the Kentucky mountains. Chicago: W. W. Hat-
field, 1931. 180p.
908. WALLACE, DONALD
Beliefs and beliefs tales from McCreary County, Kentucky. Kentucky Folklore
Record 3:133-37 1957.
908A. WASHINGTON, MARY
The folklore of the Cumberlands as reflected in the writings of Jesse Stuart.
Ph.D. University of Pennsylvania, i960.
909. WEST, JOHN F.
"Haints" I haven't known. North Carolina Folklore. D 1957 13-15.
Ghost stories from Wilkes County, N. C.
910. WHITE, DONALD
The Hatfield story. West Virginia Folklore 6:54-68 1956.
911. WILLIAMS, GRATIS
Ballads and songs of eastern Kentucky. Thesis. University of Kentucky. 1937.
912. WILLIAMS, CRATIS
Fabulous characters in the southern mountains. North Carolina Folklore. D 1958
1-6.
913. WILLIAMS, CRATIS
Lawrence County superstitions. Kentucky Folklore Record 2:137-40 1956.
914. WOODRIDGE, HENSLEY C. AND D. K. WILGUS
Bibliography of Kentucky folklore for 1956. Kentucky Folklore Record 3:17-28
1957.
"It is the purpose of this bibliography to list all books, articles, book reviews,
and recordings dealing with Kentucky folklore that appeared in 1956."
Bibliography of Kentucky folklore 1957. Kentucky Folklore Record
4:15-28 1958.
Bibliography of Kentucky folklore for 1958. Kentucky Folklore
Record 5:15-31 1959.
Bibliography of Kentucky folklore for 1959. Kentucky Folklore
Record 6:21-30 1960.
915. WRIGHT, KATHARINE
Mountain Christmas. Atlantic 166:727-31 1940.
Description of Christmas customs in Pine Mountain, Kentucky.
MUSIC
916. BRYAN, CHARLES F.
The Appalachian Mountain and hammered dulcimers. Tennessee Folklore Society
Bulletin 18:1-5 1952
80
917. BRYAN, CHARLES F.
The Appalachian Mountain dulcimer enigma. Tennessee Folk Society. Bulletin
20:86-90 1954.
918. CAMBIAIRE, C. P.
East Tennessee and western Virginia mountain ballads. London: Mitre, 1934.
179p.
919. CAMPBELL, MARIE
Answering-back song-ballads. Tennessee Folklore Society. Bulletin 24:3-10 1958.
920. CAMPBELL, OLIVE AND CECIL J. SHARP
English folk songs from the Southern Appalachians. New York: Putnam, 1917.
341p.
921. COMBS. JOSIAH H.
Folk-songs du Midi des Etats— Unis. Paris: Les Presses Universitaires, 1925. 230p.
922. DAVIS, ARTHUR K.
Folk-songs of Virginia; a descriptive index and classification of material collected
under the auspices of the Virginia Folklore Society. Durham: Duke University
Press, 1949. 389p.
923. HAUN, MILDRER E.
Cocke County ballads and songs. Thesis. Vanderbilt. 1937.
924. HENRY, MELLINGER E.
Folk-songs from the Southern Highlands. New York: J. J. Augustin, 1938. 460p.
925. HENRY, MELLINGER E.
Songs sung in the Southern Appalachians. London: Mitre, 1934. 253p.
926. HILLBILLY MUSIC
A symposium on a controversial subject. MLirW. Summer 1959 34-42.
927. JACKSON, GEORGE P.
White spirituals in the southern uplands. Chapel Hill: University of North
Carolina Press, 1933. 444p.
928. JEFFREYS, A. W.
Tuning and playing the Appalachian dulcimer. Staunton, Virginia: Appalachian
Dulcimer Co., 1958. 22p.
929. KIRKLAND, EDWIN C.
Check list of the titles of Tennessee folk songs. Journal of American Folklore.
59:423-76 1946.
Sources are given.
930. MASON, ROBERT L.
Ten old English ballads in Middle Tennessee. Southern Folklore Quarterly.
11:119-37 1947.
931. MUSICK, RUTH ANN
Ballads, folks songs and folk tales from West Virginia. Morgantown: West Vir-
ginia University Library, 1960. 71 p.
932. NILES, JOHN J.
Ballads, carols and tragic legends from the Southern Appalachian mountains.
New York: Schirmer, 1937. 20p.
933. NILES, JOHN J.
More songs of the hill folk. New York: Schirmer, 1936. 20p.
934. NILES, JOHN J.
Songs of the hill folk. New York: Schirmer, nd. 25p.
935. OWENS, BESS A.
Songs of the Cumberland. Journal of American Folklore 49:215-42 1936.
81
936. PUTNAM, JOHN F.
The plucked dulcimer of the southern mountains. Berea: Council of the South-
ern Mountains, 1957. 14p.
937. REECE, W. TODD
Mores of mountain music. North Carolina Folklore. D I960 32-37.
938. RICHARDSON, ETHEL J.
American mountain songs. New York: Greenberg, 1955. 120p.
"Notes on the songs." ppl05-19.
939. RITCHIE, JEAN
A garland of mountain songs. New York: Broadcast Music, 1953. 69p.
940. RITCHIE, JEAN
Singing family of the Cumherlands. New York: Oxford University Press, 1955.
282p.
Account of the life of the Ritchie family. Contains words and music to over
forty folk songs.
941. RITCHIE, JEAN
The swapping song book. New York: Oxford University Press, 1952. 91p.
A collection of 21 songs from the Cumberland Mountains.
942. SCARBOROUGH, DORTHY
A song catcher in southern mountains. New York: Columbia University Press,
1937. 476p.
943. SEEGER, CHARLES
The Appalachian dulcimer. Journal of American Folklore. 71:40-51 1958.
944. SHARP, CECIL J.
English folk songs from the Southern Appalachians. New York: Oxford Uni-
versity Press, 1932, 1952. 2 vols.
945. TAYLOR, VERNON H.
From fancy to fact in dulcimer discoveries. Tennessee Folk Society. Bulletin.
23:109-13 1957.
946. THOMAS, JEAN
The singin' fiddler of Lost Hope Hollow. New York: Dulton, 1938. 242p.
Biography of Jilson Setters, the blind "Singin' Fiddler."
947. THOMAS, JEAN AND JOSEPH FEEDER
The singin' gatherin'; tunes from the Southern Appalachians. New York:
Silver, Burdett Co., 1939. 113p.
948. WILGUS, D. K.
Folksongs of Kentucky, east and west. Kentucky Folklore Record. 3:89-118 1957.
949. WILSON, GORDON
Breakdowns. ML&W. O 1925 20-25.
SPEECH
950. BERREY, LESTER V.
Southern mountain dialect. American Speech. 15:45-54 1940.
951. BRAY, ROSE ALTIZER
Disappearing dialect. Antioch Revieie. 10:279-88 1950.
Discussion of speech in the Appalachian Mountains. Many examples.
952. CARPENTER, CHARLES
Variations in the southern mountain dialect. American Speech. 8:22-25 1933.
953. COLEMAN, WILMA
Mountain dialect in north Georgia. Thesis. University of Georgia. 1936.
82
951. GOMBS, JOSIAH H.
Language of the southern highlanders. PMLA. 16:302-22 1931.
955. DAVISON, ZETA C.
Word-list from the Appalachians and the Piedmont area of North Carolina.
American Dialect Society. Publication. 19:8-14 1953.
95G. FARR, T. J.
Language of the Tennessee mountains regions. American Speech. 14:89-92 1939.
957. HALL, JOSEPH S.
The phonetics of Great Smoky Mountain speech. New York: King's Grown
Press, 1942. HOp.
957A. HARRIS, JESSE W.
The dialect of Appalachia in Southern Illinois. American Speech. 21:96-99 1946.
958. MATTHIAS, V. P.
Folk speech of Pine Mountain, Kentucky. American Speech. 21:188-92 1946.
958A. MAURER, DAVID W.
The argot of the moonshiner. American Speech. 24:3-13 1949.
959. TINKLER, MAY C.
Newspaper English of Marshall County, Alabama. Southern Folklore Quarterly
21:154-59 1957.
960. WESTOVER, J. HUTSON
Highland language of the Cumberland coal country. ML&W. Fall 1960 18-21.
960A. WILLIAMS, CRATIS
The "R" in mountain speech. ML&W. Spring 1961 5-8.
"The mountaineer's emphasis on a heavy r is a general characteristic of his
speech from Pennsylvania to Georgia."
961. WOOD, GORDON
A list of words from Tennessee. American Dialect Society. Publication 29:3-18.
1958.
962. WOODBRIDGE, HENSELY C.
A tentative bibliography of Kentucky speech. American Dialect Society. Pub-
lication. 30:17-37 1958.
CRAFTS
963. ARNOLD, DORTHY A.
Some recent contributions of the Cherokee Indians of North Carolina to the
crafts of the Southern Highlands. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1952.
964. COMSTOCK, HENRY B.
Folk toys are back again. ML&W. Fall 1960 41-45.
Describes the manufacture and sale of folk toys in the Boone, North Carolina
area.
965. CO-OP turns its hands to hooking rugs. Business Week. Je 24, 1944 44.
966. EARNINGS of handicraft workers in southern mountain regions. Monthly Labor
Review. Jl 1935 146-49.
967. EATON, ALLEN H.
Handicrafts in the Southern Highlands. New York: Russell Sage Foundation,
1937. 370p.
"Selected bibliography" pp349-55.
968. EATON, ALLEN H.
The mountain handicrafts: their importance to the country and to the people
in the mountain homes. ML&W. Jl 1930 22-30.
83
969. FORD, HOWARD C.
Southern Highland artcrafts. School Arts. 42:264-60 1943.
A directory of craft centers in the Southern Appalachians.
970. GOODRICH, FRANCES L.
Mountain homespun. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1931. 91 p.
971. HODGES, SIDNEY CECIL
Handicrafts in Sevier County, Tennessee. Thesis. University of Tennessee. 1951.
972. NYLON INVADES THE SMOKIES.
Business Week Je 24, 1950 84.
Short article on the weaving and selling of handbags woven of nylon by mountain
families.
973. ROSS, CHARLES R.
Twenty years with our last pioneers. Travel Ja 1945 22-25.
Arts and crafts of the Georgia mountaineers.
974. WEAVER, EMMA
Crafts in the Southern Highlands, Asheville: Southern Highland Handicraft
Guild, 1958. 48p.
Includes photographs of craftsmen and their products.
See Edwards item 193-253 for titles published prior to 1936.
84
Miscellaneous Subjects and Addenda
974A. APPALACHIAN TRAIL CONFERENCE
Guide to the Appalachian Trail in the Southern Appalachians. Washington: the
Conference, [I960]. (Its publication No. 8).
975. ARTMAN, J. O.
Reforesting the Tennessee Valley. Garden Journal. (N.Y. Botanical Garden).
10:182-85 1960.
975A. AYER, P. F.
Along came Jones. MLirW. 34:2. 33-35 1958.
Brief sketch of Mr. and Mrs. Loyal E. Jones.
976. BARRETT, GEORGE
Study in desegregation. New York Times Magazine. S 16, 1956 11-13 + .
Study of the school desegregation crisis in Clinton, Tennessee.
977. BILLINGS, HENRY
All down the valley. New York: Viking, 1952. 208p.
A popularly-written account of the Tennessee Valley and the impact of the TVA.
Includes a "case study" of Clay County, North Carolina.
978. BRAMER, HENRY C.
The economic aspects of the water pollution abatement program in the Ohio
River Valley. Ph.D. University of Pittsburgh. 1960.
979. BROWN, HARLAN R.
In the foothills of the Cumberland; a history of eastern Kentucky. Ashland;
Graber, 1959. 113p.
980. BURNS, JAMES A.
The Crucible; a tale of the Kentucky feuds. Oneida, Kentucky, 1928. 125p.
Autobiography of a mountain teacher and one of the founders of the Oneida
Institute. Signed "Burns of the Mountains."
981. CAMPBELL, CARLOS C.
Birth of a national park in the Great Smoky Mountains. Knoxville: University
of Tennessee Press, 1960. 155p.
A history of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
982. CAMPBELL, JOHN C.
April 1928 issue of ML&W devoted largely to a series of tributes to Campbell.
983. CHARTIER, BARBARA
Weaverton: a study of culture and personality in a Southern mill town. Thesis.
University of North Carolina. 1949.
984. CLAPP, GORDON
The TVA; an approach to the development of a region. Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1955. 206p.
985. CLARK, BILLY C.
A long row to hoe. New York: Crowell, 1960. 233p.
Account of author's boyhood in the Catlettsburg, Kentucky, area. Vivid de-
scription of the life in a poverty-stricken family. Period in the 1930's and early
1940's.
986. COATES, HAROLD W.
Stories of Kentucky feuds. Knoxville: Holmes-Darst Coal Corporation, 1923,
1924, 1942. 280p.
The chapters in this volume appeared earlier as a series of booklets issued by
the Holmes-Darst Coal Corporation.
85
987. COLLINS, CARVEL E.
The literary tradition of the Southern mountaineer, 1824-1900 Ph.D. University
of Chicago. 1944.
988. COLLINS, CARVEL E.
Nineteenth Century fiction of the Southern Appalachians. Bulletin of Biblio-
graphy. 17:186-90, 215-17 1943.
989. CONNOR, ROBERT F.
G. C. Ratliff, "holler scholar." ML&W. Fall I960 13-17.
990. COPELAND, LEWIS C. AND OTHERS
Estimating Tennessee's tourist business. University of Tennessee. Bureau of
Business Research. Study 26, 1955. 119p.
990A. COWAN, SAM K.
Sergeant York and his people. New York: Funk & Wagnalls, 1922. 292p.
991. DAHIR, JAMES
Region building; community development lessons from the Tennessee Valley.
New York: Harpers, 1955. 208p.
Bibliography ppl77-202.
992. DINGMAN, HELEN H.
"AE" of the mountains. ML&W. Summer 1960 22-26.
A tribute to Allen Eaton.
993. DOBER, VIRGINIA D.
An analysis of the social life and customs of the southern Appalachians as
reflected in selected children's books. Thesis. University of North Carolina. 1956.
994. DURAND, LOYAL
Mountain moonshining in East Tennessee. Geographical Revieiv 46:168-81 1956.
A discussion of the economics and sociology of moonshining.
995. EDMUNDS, ALLEN T.
Recreation planning in the Tennessee-Cumberland Rivers watersheds. Social
Forces 21:203-5 1942.
996. ELLISON, JEROME
The plight of the hill people. Saturday Evening Post. Je 4, 1960 43.
"The stoiy of our most miserable citizens."
997. ERNST, HARRY W. AND ANDREW H. CALLOWAY
Reverse integration. New York Times Magazine. Ja 6, 1957 20.
West Virginia State College, before 1954 an all-Negro institution, has over one
thousand white students.
998. FIELDS, ANN
Patron saint of the hills. Coronet. 25 Ja 1949 156-60.
Account of Linda Neville and her work for the blind in the hills of Kentucky.
999. FINK, PAUL M. AND MYRON H. AVERY
The nomenclature of the Great Smoky Mountains. East Tennessee Historical
Society. Publications. 9:53-64 1937.
1000. FOSTER, FRANK C.
Mountain work of the Save the Children Federation. Journal of Educational
Sociology. 17-238-45 1943.
1001. FURMAN, LUCY
Katherine Pettit; a pioneer mountain worker. MLfcW. O 1936 16-20.
1002. GILMAN, GLENN
Human relations in the industrial southeast; a study of the textile industry.
Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1956. 327p.
"We concern ourselves only with one industry, cotton textiles, in one particular
area, the southeastern Appalachian Piedmont region."
86
1003. HALBERSTAM, DAVID
Town that became everybody's test tube. Reporter. Ja 10, 1957 32-36.
Study of the school desegregation crisis in Clinton, Tennessee.
1004. HARKNESS, DAVID J.
Cumberland Gap in literature. Southern Observer 3:107-15 1955.
1004A. HARRIS, EVELYN AND FRANK J. KREBS
From humble beginnings; West Virginia State Federation of Labor 1903-1957.
Charleston, 1960. 553p.
A history of the Federation. Contains much information on labor conditions
in the coal fields.
1005. HARRIS, ISABELLA
The southern mountaineer in American fiction. Ph.D. Duke University. 1948.
1006. HARRIS, H.
Two famous Kentucky feuds and their causes. Thesis. University of Kentucky.
1940.
1007. HATFIELD, LAWRENCE D.
The true story of the Hatfield and McCoy feud. Charleston, West Virginia:
Jarett, 1944. 47p.
1008. HENCH, ATCHESON L.
Corbins and Nicolsons; a preliminary report. American Speech. 13:77-79 1938.
Problems involved in recording the speech of residents of an extremely remote
area of Madison County, Virginia.
1009. HENDERSON, H. A.
Resources and incomes of rural upper East Tennessee people. Tennessee Agri-
cultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 312. I960. 30p.
1009A. HERRING, HARRIET L.
Passing of the mill village. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press,
1949. 137p.
1010. HERSH, ALAN M.
The development of the iron industry in East Tennessee. Thesis. University of
Tennessee. 1958.
1011. HODGE, CLARENCE L.
The Tennessee Valley Authority; a national experiment in regionalism. Wash-
ington: American University Press, 1938. 272p.
1012. HOFFMAN, ALFRED
The mountaineer in industry. ML&W. Ja 1930 2-7.
Reaction of East Tennessee mountaineers to work in the rayon and cotton mills.
1013. HOWARD, O. O.
The feuds in the Cumberland Mountains. Independent. 56:783-88 1904.
General Howard was the founder of Lincoln Memorial University.
1014. HUGHES, THOMAS
Rugby, Tennessee; being some account of the settlement founded on the
Cumberland Plateau . . . London: Macmillan, 1881. 168p.
1015. JONES, LOYAL
Ever your friend, Ray. ML&W. Winter 1960 16-18.
Tribute to Dr. Raymond Drukker.
1016. JONES, VIRGIL C.
The Hatfields and the McCoys. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press,
1948. 293p.
Generally regarded as the best account of the famous feud.
87
1017. KENNELL, H. RICHARD AND OTHERS
Panel on problems of employment and retraining. In: United States. Congress.
Senate. Subcommittee on problems of the aged and aging. 1960. Part 5. ppl095-
1113.
Discussion of the problems involved in retraining older workers— largely un-
employed coal miners— for other occupations.
1018. KEYS, WILLIAM G.
Editorial attitudes of West Virginia newspapers toward school and education.
Thesis. West Virginia University. 1937.
1019. KINCAID, ROBERT L.
Obituary notice and tribute to Dr. Kincaid. ML&W. Tall 1960 57-58.
1020. KRECHNIAK, HELEN B.
The Cumberlands lose a friend. ML&W. Spring 1960 34-37.
Obituary of and tribute to Dr. Mary C. Wharton.
1020A. LAMBERT, DEAN W.
Mountain funerals. ML&W. Spring 1961 43-50.
Historical account of funeral customs in the mountains.
1021. LAMBERT, ROBERT S.
The Oconaluftee Valley, 1800-1860: A study of the sources for mountain history.
North Carolina Historical Revieiv. 35:415-26 1958.
1022. LAY, ELERY
Industrial and commercial history of the tri-cities in Tennessee. Ed.D. George
Peabody. 1960.
A study of the Bristol, Johnson City, Kingsport area.
1023. LEMERT, BENJAMIN
The cotton textile industry of the southern Appalachian Piedmont. Chapel
Hill: University of North Carolina Press. 1933. 188p.
1024. LEWIS, RUTH
The Southern mountaineer in fiction. Thesis. University of Virginia. 1929.
1025. LIGHT IN THE MOUNTAINS. Time O 16, 1950 74-75.
Account of the educational and religious activities of Hiram Erakes in the Ken-
tucky mountains.
1026. LILIENTHAL, DAVID E.
TVA; democracy on the march. 20th anniversary edition. New York: Harper,
1953. 294p.
1027. LOCKARD, E. KIDD
The temperance movement in West Virginia. Thesis. West Virginia University.
1937.
1028. LOOKABILL, ROBERT E.
A survey of withdrawals from Mullins High School in 1954-1958. Thesis. West
Virginia University. 1960.
Wyoming County, West Virginia.
1029. MacCLINTOCK, S. C.
Kentucky mountains and their feuds. American Journal of Sociology. 7:1-28.
171-87 1901.
1030. McLEOD, JOHN A.
Southern highlands in prose fiction. Thesis. University of North Carolina. 1930.
Bibliography (ppl05-29) lists all works of fiction known to the author dealing
with Southern Highlands.
1031. McCOMB, THOMAS M. AND MARTHA DONALDSON
Knoxville-Knox County consolidation and the county and city school systems.
Knoxville: University of Tennessee. Bureau of Business Research. 1958. 69p.
88
1032. McCOY, HOMER C.
The rise of education and the decline of feudal tendencies in the Tug River
Valley of West Virginia and Kentucky in relation to Hatfield and McCoy feud.
Thesis. Marshall College. 1950.
1033. MacDONALD, LOIS
Mountaineers in mill villages. ML&W. Ja 1929 3-6.
1034. MacDONALD. LOIS
Southern mill hills. New York: Hillman, 1928. 151p.
Submitted as a Ph.D. dissertation at New York University.
1035. MAYER, HENRY C.
Too many followers. ML&W. Fall 1960 8-12.
Discussion of the problems of training leaders for the Southern Appalachian
area.
1036. MILLER, HELEN
A proposed regional library for Wood, Pleasants, Tyler, and Wetzel Counties.
Charleston: W. Va. Library Commission, I960. 67p. proc.
1037. MORLAND, JOHN KENNETH
Educational and occupational aspirations of mill and town school children in
a southern community. Social Forces 39:169-75 1960.
A follow-up study of the author's "Midways of Kent."
1038. MORLAND, JOHN KENNETH
Midways of Kent. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1958. 291p.
Case study of a mill village in the Piedmont.
1039. MYERS, GRACE F.
Them missionary women; or work in the southern mountains. Hillsdale,
Michigan, 1911. 132p.
1040. PARK, FOSTER
The early literature of East Tennessee. East Tennessee Historical Society.
Publications. 28:23-45 1956.
1040A. PARRIS, JOHN A.
My mountains, my people. Ashville: Citizen-Times, 1957. 259p.
A sequal to "Roaming the Mountains." Both books are collections of sketches
of life in the mountains of North Carolina.
1041. PORTER, J. HARSHALL
How to stave off the wolf. ML&W. Fall 1960 32-33.
Author suggests that the manufacture of barrel staves is an industry suited to
many mountain areas.
1042. PORTER, J. MARSHALL
Rustic rail fences ... a windfall from deadwood. ML&W. Winter. 1960 39-41.
Dead chestnut trees can be turned into rail fences, thus supplying both cash
and employment to many areas.
1043. REGIONAL LIBRARY DEVELOPMENT IN WEST VIRGINIA 1950-1960
And a projected plan for further development 1961-1966. Charleston: West Vir-
ginia Library Commission, 1960. lOp. proc.
1044. ROSS, CHARLES R.
Blue Ridge Mountain mayhem. American Forests. 50:118-20+ 1944.
Account of feuds and violence in the mountains of northern Georgia.
1045. SAALBACH, WILLIAM F.
United States bituminous coal markets; trends since 1920 and prospects to 1975.
Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1960. 44p.
89
1046. SELZNICK, PHILIP
TVA and the grass roots; a study in the sociology of organization. Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1949. 274p. (University of California Publications
in Culture and Society v.3).
1047. SHACKELFORD, NEVYLE
Mountain streams. ML&W. Winter 1960 14-15.
Many streams are little more than "open sewers," a menace alike to health and
the tourist industry.
1048. SIZER, LEONARD M. AND WARD F. PORTER
The relation of knowledge to adoption of recommended practice. West Virginia
Agricultural Experiment Station. Bulletin 446, 1960. 12p.
A study of farm operators in Pocahontas County, West Virginia, to determine
"the relationship of knowledge about certain farm practices to other socio-
economic variables and the relationship of these variables to the adoption of
recommended practices."
1049. SIZER, LEONARD M.
Problems of the aged in rural West Virginia. In: United States. Congress. Senate.
Subcommittee on problems of the aged and aging. 1960. Part 5. pp 1021 -32.
Author stresses such factors as social isolation, social alienation and a sense of
deprivation. Part Five of the Committee's report deals with the problems of
the aged in West Virginia.
1050. SIZER, MIRIAM
Christian names in the Blue Ridge of Virginia. American Speech. 8:34-37 1933.
1051. SIZER, MIRIAM
Surnames in the Blue Ridge of Virginia. American Speech. 12:267-69 1937.
1052. SMITH, RICHARD C.
Human crisis in the kingdom of coal. New York: Friendship Press, 1952. H3p.
Examines the plight of the coal miner in both Europe and America. Author
was for some years Director of the Mountaineer Mining Mission in Morgan-
town, West Virginia.
1053. SPIVAK, JOHN L.
The devil's brigade: the story of the Hatfield-McCoy feud. New York: Bremer
and Warren, 1930. 325p.
1053A. SWIFT, KATE
Horseback holiday. American Forests. D 1957 14-16.
"A saddle trip in the Great Smokies is an ideal vacation."
1054. TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY. Division of Regional Planning Studies.
Recreational development of the southern highlands region, np, 1938. 61p. proc.
1055. TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY. Technical Library
A bibliography for the TVA program. Knoxville: i960. 54p.
1056. TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY. Technical Library
An indexed bibliography of the Tennessee Valley Authority. Knoxville: 1936-)-.
Cumulative supplements are issued annually.
1057. THOMAS, JEAN
The sun shines bright. New York: Prentice-Hall, 1940. 275p.
An autobiography of "the traipsin woman." Includes many anecdoies of moun-
tain life in eastern Kentucky.
1058. THOMAS, JEAN
The traipsin' woman. New York, Dutton, 1933. 277p.
A series of sketches and stories of life in the eastern Kentucky mountain country.
1059. THOMAS, WILLIAM R.
Life among the hills and mountains of Kentucky. Louisville: Standard Priming,
1926. 414p.
90
1060. THOMPSON, SAMUEL H.
The highlanders of the South. New York: Eaton & Mains, 1910. 86p.
Deals largely with East Tennessee.
1061. TORREY, BRADFORD
World of green hills; observations of nature and human nature in the Blue
Ridge. New York: 1898. 285p.
An account of a naturalist's travels in the mountain country of Virginia and
North Carolina.
1001 A. ULMER, MARY
Mountain worker. ML&W Winter 1953 20-21.
A sketch of the Rev. Rufus Morgan.
1062. VAUGHN, MARSHALL E.
ML&W— its purpose and scope. ML&W Spring 1960 17-20.
1063. WALTERS, R. N.
A survey and sociological study of twenty-five weekly newspapers in eastern
Kentucky. Thesis. University of Kentucky. 1936.
1064. WATKINS, F. C.
Thomas Wolfe and the southern mountaineers. South Atlantic Quarterly 50:58-71
1951.
1065. WENGERT, NORMAN I.
Valley of tomorrow; the TVA and agriculture. Knoxville: University of Tennes-
see, 1952. 151p. (University of Tennessee Record. Extension Series 28:1)
1066. WHISMAN, JOHN D.
A new commission tackles an old problem. ML&W Fall 1959 18-19.
Discusses the newly-formed Eastern Kentucky Regional Planning Commission.
1067. WOODS, ROY C.
Effects of conflicting patterns of thinking. Educational Forum 22:447-52 1958.
Study of the Hatfield-McCoy feud as an example of what may happen "when
a pattern of socially accepted thinking encounters an equally accepted anti-
social pattern."
1068. WOODS, ROY C.
History of the Hatfield-McCoy feud with special attention to the effects of
education on it. West Virginia History 22:27-32 1960.
1069. WOOTTON, CLARA
They have topped the mountains. Frankfort: Blue Grass Press, 1960. 159p.
"The story of a circuit riding lawyer of the Kentucky Mountains." The lawyer
was Bailey P. Wootton, an important figure in Kentucky politics.
91
SUBJECT & AUTHOR INDEX
(Numbers refer to items)
Acuff, J. T. 545
Adams, William H. 60
Addington, Violet W. 676
Adoption 206
Adult education 734, 735. 741, 767, 771,
775, 1017
Aged 94, 1017. 1049
Agricultural education 805, 812, 794A
Agriculture 785-854, 1048
Ahrenholz, Gladys 382
Akers, Carmen E. 228
Akers, Elmer 264
Alabama 102, 239. 492. 498, 505. 517,
597, 599, 602, 603, 607, 610, 612, 614,
694, 727, 759, 811, 959
Alabama Educational Survey Commission
517
Alexander, E. H. 637
Alexander, Frank D. 61
Alexander County, North Carolina 534
Alleghany County, Virginia 161
Allen, Roscoe J. 559
Allred, Charles E. 62, 423, 785
Almon, Clopper 63, 786
Alpine Recreation Association 469
Ambrose, L. M. 691
Ambrose, Luther 787
American Civil Liberties Union 356
American Constitutional Association 383
American Friends Service Committee 403
American Inland Mission 461
Anderson, Francis G. 182
Anderson, Paul F. 560
Anderson County, Tennessee 368, 755
Anglin, Frances B. 730
Appalachian Trail 974 A
Apples 804
Aptitude See Intelligence & Aptitude
Archer, Cordelia 561
Armentrout, Walter W. 1, 788
Armstrong, Anne W. 1A
Arnold, Dorthy A. 963
Amy, Malcolm 354
Aronoff, Jacob 377
Vrthurdale, W. Va. 72. 677
Artman, J. O. 975
Arts & Crafts 663, 963-975
Ashe County, North Carolina 577
Asher, E. J. 218
Ashville, North Carolina 438
Ashville Farm School 669
Astronomy 150
Atkins, Enos E. 729
Atkins, Samuel 789
Augusta County, Virginia 76, 106, 828
Avery, Myron H. 999
Avery County, North Carolina 101, 134,
298, 595
Ayer, P. F. 975A
B
Backman, Jules 411
Bacon, H. S. 229
Bailey, Carol 424
Bailey, Charlotte P. 731
Bailey, E. B. 481
Bailey, Edgar W. 562
Bailey, John H. 790
Ball, Bonnie 482
Ball, Richard A. 384
Ballads See Folklore; music
Balsam Grove, North Carolina 143
Bannerman, Arthur M. 169
Baptists 464, 474, 475, 477, 626
Barb, John M. 357
Barbour County, West Virginia 213, 497,
891
Barker, Toramie D. 710, 711
Barkley, Anna M. 732
Barnard, E. F. 230
Barnes, Clarence E. 385
Barrels, 1028
Barrett, George 976
Barry, Helen B. 733
Basso, Hamilton 633
Bath County, Virginia 829
Bander, Ward W. 65, 183
Beach, Robert F. 712
Beale, Calvin L. 483
Bedford County, Virginia 60, 611, 826
Beebe, Gilbert W. 231, 232, 342
Beech Creek, Kentucky 189, 192
Beers, Howard W. 2, 3, 66, 265, 266, 277,
287, 288, 289, 294, 324, 328
Belcher, John C. 233
Bell County, Kentucky 173, 348
Bendall, John W. 425
Bennett, Clemmon A. 563
Bennett, H. D. 855
Benschoten, J. A. 734
Benton, Robert L. 518
Berea College 249, 628-632
Berea College. Department of Education
519, 520
Berry, Lester V. 950
Berry Schools 633-636
Beshears, Ralph L. 184
Beynon, Erdmann 267
Bibb County, Alabama 610
Bidstrup, George 616
Big Sandy River 48, 330
Billings, Henry 977
Bing, William K. 80
Bird, E. T. 799
92
Birth control 231, 232. 241
Birth rate See Population
Blacksburg, Virginia 92
Blair, Reuben M. 564
Bland, Marion F. 234
Bland County, Virginia 107
Bliss, Russell L. 185
Blizzard, William C. 358
Blount County, Alabama 607
Blount County, Tennessee 745A, 749
Blue Ridge Mountains 41, 49. 219, 224.
247, 1050, 1051
Bonar, Ross 692
Bond, Sirus O. 649
Bondurant, J. H. 791, 821
Bonser, Howard J. 67, 68. 69, 792, 793
Bookmobiles 712A See also Libraries
Boone, North Carolina 964
Boone County, West Virginia 164, 738,
772
Borah, Leo A. 70
Boshears, Frances 875, 876
Bosworth, Karl A. 170
Botetourt County, Virginia 79, 830
Bott, Matthias 426
Bowman, Elizabeth S. 4
Bowman, Owen 521
Boyd, V. A. 186
Boyd County, Kentucky 95, 578
Bradley, Frances S. 235
Bradley County, Tennessee 472, 537, 609,
745
Brailler, Floyd 650
Bramer, Hen ry C. 978
Brasington, Clayton F. 794
Bray, Rose A. 951
Breakdowns (dance) 949
Breathitt County, Kentucky 168, 171, 531,
587, 747, 821, 861
Breazeale, Norma 290
Breckenridge, Desha 359
Breckinridge, Mary 235A
Breeding, Clarence H. 794A
Biender, Ernest V. 71
Bright, Mildred 187
Bristol, Tennessee 509, 533, 685, 1022
Britt, Roy T. 856
Brooks, William E. 72
Brosky, A. F. 386
Brown, Barbara 188
Brown, Harlan R. 979
Brown, James S. 73, 189-192, 291 292. 293,
294
Brown, Kenneth 713
Brownlee, Frederick 644
Brucker, Elizabeth 693
Bruere, Martha 436
Bruere, Robert 436
Brunk, Harry A. 437
Brush, Frederick 877
Brunner, Edmund 735
Bryan, Charles F. 916, 917
Bryant, William A. 74
Buchanan, John A. 412
Buchanan, Margaret T. 268
Buchanan County, Virginia 108, 750
Bullen, Robert W. 714
Buncombe County, North Carolina 741
Bureau o£ Cooperatiye Medicine 343
Burman, Ben L. 75
Burns, James A. 980
Butt, Herbert 69
B\ar, Thomas M. 735A
Byars, J. C. 360
Cabin Creek, West Virginia 364
Caldwell, Mary F. 5
Caldwell, Morris G. 269
Calhoun County, West Virginia 778
Callahan, North 6
Calloway, Andrew H. 997
Cambriaire C. P. 918
Campbell, Carlos G. 981
Campbell, John C. 7, 617, 982 See also
John C. Campbell Folk School
Campbell, Marie 878, 879, 880. 919
Campbell, Olive 618, 645, 646, 647, 920
Campbell, Robert F. 438
Campbell County, Tennessee 348, 588
Caney Junior College 655
Cansler, Charles W. 484
Carder, Roscoe H. 565
Carney, Mabel 736
Carothers, J. E. 795
Carpenter, Charles 952
Carritt, G. 361
Carroll County, Virginia 109. 521 831
Carson-Newman Coilege 522
Carter, R. G. 597
Carter County, Kentucky 586
Carter County, Tennessee 159. 532. 679,
688, 744
Caruthers, Eugene 598
Cassell, Charles W. 439
Catlett, Clay 76
Catlettsburg, Kentucky 985
Cattle 808, 848 See also Liyestock industry
and trade
Cessana, Ralph W. 651
Chalmers, F. W. 236
Chapman, Mary L. 330
Charleston, West Virginia 182
Chartier, Barbara 983
Chase, Lewis I. 77
Chemical Industry 132, 323
Cherokee County, Alabama 614
Cherokee County, North Carolina 169,
512 540, 686
Cherokee Indians 487, 488, 490, 490A. 963
Chicago 273, 275, 280, 281, 284. 286
Childers, James S. 634
93
Children & Youth 182, 185, 187, 193, 195,
196, 197, 200, 204, 205, 208, 210, 211,
212, 213, 214, 216, 234, 258, 260, 347,
391, 395, 398, 469, 471, 769 See also
Education; families; juvenile delin-
quency
Children's literature 993
Christian Church 477
Christiansen, John R. 78, 237, 393, 797
Christmas customs 915
Churches See Religion; individual de-
nominations
Cincinnati 270, 271, 274, 282, 450
City government See Local government
Clairborne County, Tennessee 348, 523,
731, 794 A
Clapp, Elsie R. 677
Clapp, Gordon 984
Clark, Billy O. 985
Clark, Elmer T. 440
Clark, H. T. 653
Clark, Septima 638
Clarke County, Georgia 177
Clarke County, Virginia 162, 832
Clay County, Kentucky 173, 407
Clay County, North Carolina 977
Clay County, West Virginia 757
Clayton, C. F. 796
Cleveland County, North Carolina 600,
608
Clevinger, Woodrow R. 295
Clinton, Tennessee 751, 976, 1003
Clopper, Edward N. 193
Clothing Industry 132
Coal Mines & Miners 329-434, 894, 896,
960, 1004A, 1017, 1045, 1052
Coates, Harold W. 986
Cobb, Anne 662, 881
Cobb, Donald 566
Cobb, Irene S. 500A
Coger, William N. 694
Cohen, Irwin B. 79
Coke County, Tennessee 557, 579, 613,
800, 923
Coleman, M. 362
Coleman, Wilma 953
Colleges & universities 735A See also
Names of individual institutions
Collins, Carvel E. 987, 988
Collins, Ernest 171
Collins, William 271
Combs, Jerry W. 296
Combs, Josiah H. 8, 882, 921, 954
Cometti, Elizabeth 485
Commonwealth College 661
Comstock, Henry B. 964
Conference of Southern Mountain Work-
ers 9
Conley, Phil 331
Conner, Maynard C. 80
Conner, Robert F. 989
Conservation 790, 863 See also Reforesta-
tion
Cook, John H. 737
Cook, Nash 738
Cook, Ruth E. 238
Cooke, Kennis 568
Coolidge, Ruth 648
Cooper, H. S. 486
Cooper, John R. 501
Cooperative associations 815, 819, 965
Cope, Annis D. 569
Copeland, Lewis C. 990
Corn 811
Cornell, F. D. 81
Cornett, Elizabeth B. 883
Cotton 811
Couch, W. T. 10
Coughenour, C. M. 797
Council of the Southern Mountains 2, 11
Counties, statistics 25
County government See Local govern-
ment
Cowan, Sam K. 990A
Cowley, Malcolm 363
Craddock, Ernest B. 695
Crafts See Arts & crafts
Craghead, Paul 546
Craig, Edward M. 441
Craig, Ronald B. 857
Craig County, Virginia 110
Crawford, Bruce 387
Crawford, Charles B. 364
Credle, Ellis 884
Cressey, Paul F. 388
Crick, Herbert W. 567
Crime 75, 85, 410 See also Juvenile delin-
quency
Crura, West Virginia 524, 769
Cullman County, Alabama 592, 498, 607
Culpeper County, Virginia 833
Cumberland County, Tennessee 36, 68,
163, 785, 856
Cumberland Gap 70, 1004
Cunningham, Addie J. 239
Customs See Folklore
Cyr, Frank W. 739
D
Dahir, James 991
Dairy industry 844
Dances 889, 905, 949
Daniels, Freeman J. 12
Danley, Robert A. 297
Darnell, Harold L. 740
Dating 185
Davidson, Donald 13
Davidson, Dwight M. 82
Davidson, Perry 442
Davis, Arthur K. 922
Davis, D. H. 14, 272
Davis, Haze A. 523
Davis, Hester A. 487
Davison, Zeta, C. 955
Dawson, George W. 524
Day, D. L. 194
94
Day, Delia 741
Day, John F. 15
Decentralization 24
Deep Water School 765
Dekalh County, Alabama 607
Delozier, Robert C. 741 A
Deschamps, Alfred J. 798
Desegregation See Schools, desegregation
Detroit 264
Diabetes 261
Dialects See Speech
Dickenson County, Virginia 111, 906
Diehl, James A. 678
Diet See Nutrition
Dillow, Nola M. 697
Dingman, Helen H. 992
Disciples of Christ 445
Dixon, Hertha 599
Dober, Virginia D. 993
Dodson, L. S. 134, 298
Donaldson, Martha 1031
Doolittle, Warren T. 858
Doran, Paul E. 443
Dorner, P. 814
Dorris, Jonathan T. 654
Dotson, John A. 389
Douglas, Harlan P. 444
Douglas Reservoir 133
Drake, Charles 218A, 332
Draper, Warren F. 344
Dreiser, Theodore 374
Drop outs See School attendance
Drukker, Raymond 1015
Duerr, William A. 859, 860, 861, 862
Duff, Frank 427
Dulaney, Ben B. 83
Dulcimers 916, 917, 928, 936, 943, 945
Dunlap, A. R. 487A
Duncan, Hannibal 15A
Dunn, Fannie W. 619
Durand, Lloyd 799, 994
Durr, William 859, 860, 861, 862
Durrett, Harold L. 428
Dutton, William S. 655
Dykeman, Wilma 16
Dykes, Archie R. 525, 547
East Tennessee Educational Association
594
East Tennessee University 656
Eastern Kentucky Regional Planning
Commission 1066
Eastern Kentucky State College 654
Eaton, Allen H. 967, 968, 992
Ebert, Charles H. 84
Economic conditions 51, 60, 76, 77, 79-
83, 88, 93, 94, 95, 97, 98, 102, 105,
127, 138, 142, 145, 146, 147, 153, 154,
161, 162, 167 See also Coal; employ-
ment; income; individual industries.
Eddy, Donald 85
Edmunds, Allen T. 995
Education 22, 103, 216, 389, 424, 447, 449,
501-784, 1028, 1031, 1037 See also
Children & youth
Educational guidance See Guidance
Edwards, A. S. 17
Edwards, Allen D. 93
Edwards, Dorothy 716
Edwards, Evelyn L. 717
Edwards, J. H. 390
Electrification 793
Elizabethton, Tennessee 210
Elk Garden, West Virginia 146
Elkins, John E. 570
Elliott County, Kentucky 216
Ellis, Mabel B. 391
Ellison, Jerome 996
Ehod, Henry J. 571
Emmet, Boris 365
Employment 1, 50, 64, 86A, 90, 91, 100.
136, 137, 164, 412, 791, 1017
Enslow, Ella 526
Ernst, Harry W. 332, 884A, 997
Erosion 800
Estabrook, Arthur H. 18, 86
Evans, Homer C. 799A
Evans, Irvin C. 679
Evernden, William L. 698
Fairmont, West Virginia 365
Families and Family life 183, 186, 188.
189, 190, 191, 192, 198, 199, 201-205,
207, 208, 209, 215, 217, 328, 393, 395,
510
Farm tenure 813
Farmers Federation 815
Farr, T. J. 195, 885, 956
Fauquier County, Virginia 593
Fayette County, West Virginia 714, 788
Feaster, Eston K. See West Virginia. Legis-
lative Interim Committee
Fenton, John H. 172
Feuds 980, 986, 1006, 1013, 1032, 1011
See also Hatfield-McCoy feud
Fiction See Literature
Field, Lewis 345
Fields, Ann 998
Fink, Paul M. 999
Finney, Raymond 620
Fisher, Waldo, E. 413
Fishman, Leo 86A
Floods 128
Floyd County, Georgia 103, 502
Floyd County, Kentucky 501, 572. 897
Floyd County, Virginia 112
Fogg, Gordon 145
Folk arts-teaching of 884A
Folk medicine 247, 249A
Folk schools 616-675
"Folk society" 3
Folklore 431, 872-915
Follow-up studies 730, 764
Folmsbee, Stanley J. 656
95
Ford, Howard G. 969
Ford, Thomas R. 237
Foreman, Kenneth J. 444A
Forestry and forest products 841, 855-871,
975, 1041, 1042, 1054, See also Furni-
ture industry, woodworking industry
Forster, G. W. 818
Fortune, Alonzo 445
Foscuc, E. J. 87
Foster, Clementine 600
Foster, Frank C. 1000
Four-H Clubs 213
Fox, John Jr. 18A
Fiakes, Hiram 1025
Frank, Bernard 800
Franklin County, Tennessee 147. 259,
493, 536, 576, 620, 801A
Frazier, Ghalmer 572
Frederick County, Maryland 96
Frederick County, Virginia 145
Freedman, Ronald 273
French, Jack 392
French Broad River 16
French Creek, West Virginia 131
Friedl, Joseph J. 573
Friedman, John R. 88
Frisch, Isadore 333
Frontier Nursing Service 235 A, 240, 250,
263
Frost, Norman 527
Frost, William G. 628
Frye, Paul D. 548
Fuller, Hugh E. 657
Fuller, R. V. 601
Fulton, M. K. 829, 831, 834, 838, 839
Funeral customs 1020A
Furman, Lucy 658, 1001
Furniture industry 84
Gabbard, Eugene 574
Galilean Children's Home 675
Galloway, Robert E. 61, 89, 90, 91, 801
Gardner, Annie C. 488
Gardner, Carolina 240
Garland, M. P. 549
Garner A. L. 299
Garnett, William E. 92, 93, 196, 446
Gaston County, North Carolina 473
Gatlinburg, Tennessee 87
Gault, Thomas G. 801A
Gaumnitz, Walter H. 528, 742
Gearreald, T. N. 819
Geisler, Adalene 94
Geisler, M. A. 232
Georgia 17, 61, 71, 89, 103, 177, 198, 222,
233, 301, 502, 513, 563, 606, 633-636,
666, 667, 671, 721, 810, 953, 973, 1044
Germans 486, 492, 493, 499
Gibbs, James E. 529
Gibson, Ernest Willis 95
Gibson, Vivian 502
Gibson, W. L. 802
Giffin, Roscoe 19, 270, 274, 275
Gilbert, William H. 489
Giles County, Virginia 113
Gilliam, Lena 241
Gilman, Glenn 1002
Gilmer County, West Virginia 892
Giuhan, Mercer A. 602
Gladden, James W. 393
Glass, Daniel 603
Glasscock, H. 886
Glendinning, R. M. 803
Glenn, Alfonso 530
Goats, 787
Goff, Kenneth J. 503
Golden, Charles E. 504
Gooch, Ernest D. 803 A
Gooch, Wilbur 531
Goodrich, Frances L. 970
Gordon Countv, Georgia 177, 563
Gore, Nina L. 743
Grainger County, Tennessee 514A, 545,
803
Grant, John L. 490
Gratton, C. Hartley 20
Gray, L. C. 21
Gray, Wayne T. 22, 300. 699
Graybeal, David M. 22A
Grayson County, Virginia 114, 834, 849
Great Smokv Mountains 30, 41, 49A, 957,
999, 105 3 A
Great Smoky Mountains National Park
981
Greenbrier County, West Virginia 690,
853
Greene County, Tennessee 208, 548, 684,
806, 824
Greene County, Virginia 835
Greenslade, Rush V. 414
Greenville, Tennessee 105
Greenville County, South Carolina 97,
554, 708, 733, 735
Gregory, Madeline T. 532
Griffin, Gerald 334
Griffith, Henrietta 447
Grigsby, S. E. 96
Grindstaff, Dana R. 744
Grisso, Robert D. 804
Grossman, D. A. 22B
Gruetli, Tennessee 491
Grundy County, Tennessee 36, 423, 495,
542
Guerrant, Edward O. 448, 460
Guidance 187, 322, 408, 424, 425, 428,
531, 668, 689, 744, 747, 748, 759A,
780A
Guineas 489, 497
Gulick, John 490A
Gullick, Guy A. 97
Gustafson, R. O. 861
H
Hackamack, L. 306
Hahn, W. P. 197
96
Habersham County, Georgia 233
Halberstam, David 1003
Hale, Nathan S. 242
Hale, Wade H. 449
Haley, Elliott G. 98
Hall, Joseph S. 887, 957
Halpert, Herbert 888
Ham, Tom 198
Hamilton C. H. 199, 243, 245
Hamilton, Michael 450
Hamilton County, Tennessee 211, 715
Hancock, Harry L. 745
Hancock County, Tennessee 551, 782
Hanczarvk, Edwin W. 100
Handicrafts See Arts & Crafts
Haney, William H. 23
Hanna, Edwin B. 99
Hanna, Margaret 301
Hardin, Rector R. 24
Hardin County, Tennessee 856
Hargrove, Jack B. 505
Harkness, David J. 1004
Harlan County, Kentucky 85, 187, 374,
377, 378, 388, 394, 408, 511, 535, 581,
668, 689
Harless, N. R. 745A
Harlow, Alvin 746
Harold, K. E. 506
Harrill, Bob E. 507
Harris, A. J. 832, 833
Harris, Evelyn 1004 A
Harris, George E. 302
Harris, Isabella 1005
Harris, Jesse W. 957A
Harris, M. 1006
Harrison Countv, West Virginia 649, 893
Hait, John F. 311
Hartman, Vladimir E. 101
Harvey, K. F. 244
Hatcher, O. Latham 660, 747, 748
Hatfield, Lawrence D. 1007
Hatfield-McCoy feud 1016, 1032, 1053,
1067, 1068
Haun, Mildred E. 923
Hawkins County, Tennessee 508, 525, 569,
759A, 768
Hawley, Marion H. 102
Hay, Donald 233, 245
Haywood, Charles 872
Haywood County, North Carolina 134,
245, 298
Hazel Green Academy 672A
Headrick, Warren B. 749
Health 22, 58, 228-263, 342-355. 756,
758, 759 See also Mental health; folk
medicine
Health education 770
Health insurance 233, 245
Heath, Emily P. 103
Heberle, Rudolf 303
Heflin, Catherine 66, 265, 266, 276, 277
Hench, Atcheson L. 1008
Henderson, H. A. 1009
Henderson, Helen R. 750
Henderson County, North Carolina 720
Henry. Mellinger E. 924, 925
Henry, Thomas R. 45
Herndon, C. N. 219
Herring, Harriet L. 1009 A
Hersh, Alan M. 1010
Hickey, Margaret 200
High Point, North Carolina 84
Highlander Folk School 637-643
Hilbish, Florence 451
Hill, James E. 804A
Hill, Raymond T. 104
Hillbilly music 926
Hindman Settlement School 658, 662
Hinebaugh, Margaret H. 575
Hines, James 201
Hinton, Bruce 805
Hirsch, Nathaniel 220, 221
Hitch, Margaret A. 202
Hitt, Homer L. 304, 305
Hodge, Clarence L. 1011
Hodges, Sidney C. 971
Hoffman, Betty 394
Hoffmann, Alfred 1012
Hoffsommer, Harold 96
Holden, Anna 751
Holiness churches 440, 452 See also Pente-
costal churches
Holland, Carl W. 533^
Hollandsworth, G. 395
Hollev, Marie E. 604
Holly', J. Fred 105
Holt, John B. 452
Home economics 67, 783
Hooker, Elizabeth R. 453, 454
Horton, Myles 638
Hospitals See Health
Howard, Mont ice B. 718
Howard, O. O. 1013
Hudson, G. Donald 106
Hughes, Frank G. 732
Hughes, R. B. 806
Hughes, Thomas 1014
Hughson, Walter 455
Human, William D. 550
Humbert, R. L. 107-125
Humble, Marion 719
Hummel, R. L. 82
Hundley, John R. 278
Hunter, Catherine H. 576
Hurst, Otis C. 753
Hurst, Thomas E. 415
Hurt, A. B. 577
Hutchison, Robert S. 305A
Hutson, Andrew C. 367, 368
Hyland, Thomas S. 203
Illinois 957A
Illiteracy 775 See also Adult education;
moonlight schools
Immunization 229
97
Income 102. 120, 130, 140, 789, 820, 821,
823, 1000
Indianapolis 285, 322
Indians 483 See also Cherokee Indians;
Malungeons
Industries and Industrialization 24, 63,
74, 107-125, 129, 132, 141, 141A, 156,
157, 159, 160, 165, 305A, 307, 786,
822, 842, 1012
Ingram, Henry R. 507A
Ingram, Milton J. 605
Innes, Thomas C. 754
Integration See Schools, desegregation
Intelligence and aptitude 218-227
Iron industry 1010
Irwin, Frank E. 755
Isaack, Thomas S. 156
J
Jackson, George P. 927
Jackson, Helen F. 491
Jackson, Minnie L. 606
Jackson, Ward B. 578
Jackson County, Kentucky 565, 719
Jackson County, West Virginia 851
Jarvis, James A. 173
Jasper, Mary K. 621
Jefferson Countv, Alabama 602, 612, 694,
727, 759
Jefferson County, Kentucky 677
Jefferson Countv, Tennessee 311, 522, 583
Jeffreys, A. W. 928
Jenkins, Kentucky 386
Jensen, Harald R. 807
Jesse, R. W. 229
Jillison, Willard R. 335
John G. Campbell Folk School 644-648
Johnson, Charles S. 25
Johruson, Jack D. 808
Johnson, John L. 126
Johnson, Joseph M. 804
Johnson, Paul M. 755A
Johnson, Rayburn 306
Johnson, Roy L. 508
Johnson, Victor M. 509
Johnson City, Tennessee 210, 706, 758,
760, 781,' 1022
Johnson Countv, Kentucky 289, 318, 324,
328
Johnson County, Tennessee 549, 561
Jones, Abraham 607
Jones, Leslie 17, 222
Jones, Loyal 975A, 1015
Jones, Oleona 26
Jones, Virgil C. 1016
Jones, William 756
Journalism See Newspapers
Justice, Dewey J. 246
Juvenile delinquency 184, 194, 203A. 469
See also Crime
K
Kanawha Welfare Council 203A
Kane, Harnett T. 635
Kaufman, Harold F. 456, 457
Kay, Cora B. 224
Keebler, Alleen S. 701
Keller, Franklin J. 531
Keller, Luther 807
Kelly, L. C. 458
Kennedy, Ralph E. 127
Kennell, H. R. 1017
Kent, George 659
Kentron, J. 657
Kentucky 3, 8, 14, 15, 19, 23, 31, 43, 58,
65, 66, 73, 78, 85, 90, 91, 95, 99, 126,
128, 134, 138, 140, 144, 149, 166, 168,
171, 173, 173A, 175, 183, 185, 186, 187,
189-193, 201, 203, 207, 209, 215, 216,
218, 220, 221, 228, 30, 237, 240, 246,
248, 249A, 251, 262, 265, 266, 269, 272,
287-290, 293, 294, 297, 298, 300, 302,
310, 314, 317, 318, 319, 324, 325,
328, 333, 334, 335, 336, 337, 338,
339, 340, 348, 354, 356, 359, 360, 361,
363, 370, 371, 371, 374, 375, 377, 378,
386, 388, 389, 391, 393, 394, 407,
408, 409, 416, 427, 429, 445, 447,
456, 457, 461, 462, 464, 501, 511,
519, 520, 531, 535, 552, 562, 565,
567, 570, 572, 574, 578, 581, 584,
586, 587, 589, 591, 596, 621, 622,
625, 628-632, 654, 655, 658, 665, 668,
675, 677, 689, 691, 699, 707, 712,
712A, 716, 719, 723, 724, 747, 756,
766, 773, 783A, 791, 796, 797, 798,
801, 803A, 807, 820, 821, 860, 861,
862, 865, 879, 880, 881, 882, 883,
897, 900, 901, 907, 908, 911, 913,
914, 915, 948, 958, 962, 979, 985,
986, 1006, 1025, 1029, 1032, 1057, 1058,
1059, 1063, 1066, 1069
Kentucky. Department of Economic De-
velopment 128
Kentucky. Legislative Research Commis-
sion 429
Kentucky Legislator 173 A
Kentucky Mountain Holiness Association
461, 462
Kenworthy, Wilmer E. 430
Kephart, Horace 27
Kernodle, Wayne 28
Ketron, Joseph 657
Keys, Robert K. 702
Keys, William G. 1018
Kidd, Paul E. 129
Kilbourne, Richard 863
Killian, Lewis M. 279, 280, 281
Kinard, J. D. 809
Kincaid, Robert L. 1019
King, Howard M. 680
King, James B. 346
Kingsley Seminary 657
Kingsport, Tennessee 63, 74, 174, 210,
676, 717, 754, 786, 1022
Kirkland, Edwin C. 929
98
Knicely, Howard 307
Knight, Mazie M. 579
Knott County, Kentucky, 144, 171, 215,
501, 658, 773, 820, 857, 861, 883
Knox County, Kentucky 173
Knox County, Tennessee 179, 194, 585A,
61 3A, 707A, 725, 1031
Koch, Lucian 661
Kollmorgen, W. M. 492, 493, 494
Konnarock Training School 660, 674
Korson, George G. 396, 431
Krebs, Frank' }. 1004A
Krcchniak, Helen B. 1020
Labor education 771
Labor force See Employment
Labor relations 356-381, 414, 418, 432,
433, 1002, 1004A
Ladd, Robert A. 580
Lagrone, W. V. 811
Laing, James T. 308, 309
Lambert, Dean W. 1020A
Lambert, Robert S. 1021
Lancaster, J. L. 810
Lancaster, John L. 130
Land classification & use 796, 798, 801 A,
802, 816, 818, 820, 824-840, 853, 871
Lane, Billy J. 510
Lane, Winthrop D. 369
Lanham, B. F. 811
Lanman, Charles 29
Larson, O. F. 310
Laurel County, Kentucky 337, 591, 796
Lawless, Ray M. 873
Lawrence County, Kentucky 570, 913
Lay, Elery 1022
Leadership 68, 152, 1035
Lebanon, Virginia 155
Lebus, William F. 416
Ledbetter, Margaret 459
Lee, Jennie 370
Lee County, Virginia 115
Leeder, Joseph 947
Lemert, Benjamin 1023
Lemons, James 812
Lenski, Lois 720
Lentz, Fred W. 534
Leslie County, Kentucky 171, 249A, 262,
407
Letcher County, Kentucky 55, 501, 589
Levin, Melvin R. 22B
Lewis, Charles 1). 864
Lewis, Claudia 204, 641
Lewis, Ruth 1024
Lewis County, West Virginia 780
Lexington, Kentucky 265, 266, 269, 276,
277
Leybourne, G. C. 282
Libraries 710-728, 1036. 1043
Libraries, school 599, 718, 722, 726, 727
Lilienthal, David E. 1026
Lincoln Memorial University 651, 670,
673, 673A
Lindsey, Quenton W. 813
Linger, Margaret V. 131
Linkinogger, Jessie V. 757
Linton, Ron M. 371
Liquor problem See Moonshining; tem-
perance
Literature 986, 987, 993, 1004, 1005, 1024,
1030, 1040, 1064
Little, Arthur D. 132
Livesay, Glenn O. 551
Livestock industry & trade 794, 803A, 808
Livingston, William J. 397
Lloyd, Alice 655
Local government 169-181, 333, 427, 1031
Lockard, E. Kidd 1027
Logan County, West Virginia 164, 341,
342, 397, 582, 884A.
London, Martha A. 608
Long, E. J. 814
Lookabill, Robert E. 1028
Loomis, Charles P. 134
I^oudoun County, Virginia 836
Lowe, Cornelia 721
Luebke, B. H. 133, 311
Lumber industry See Forestry and forest
products
Lutherans 439
Lynn, Denise D. 662
M
McAllister, James G. 460
McCartney, J. A. 828, 830
MacClintock, S. 1029
McClure, James 815
McClure, Virginia G. 31
McComb, Thomas M. 1031
McConnell, Lela 461, 462
McCormick, Kyle 371A
McCoy, Homer C. 1032
McCoy, Lottie 581
McCreary County, Kentucky 908
McCulloch, Jack P. 703
McDade, Frank E. 582
McDonald, Lois 1033, 1034
McDowell, Flora L. 889
McDowell County, West Virginia 164,
351, 399, 514, 573
McElroy, Don D. 758
McGill, Nettie P. 347
McGoldrick, Joseph 372
McKinney, Lavonia 759
McKinney, Zeyland 681
MeLeod, John A. 1030
McMinn Countv, Tennessee 507, 518, 585,
752, 780A, 856
Macon County, North Carolina 817, 843
Madison County, Virginia 1008
Magoffin County, Kentucky 99, 134, 183,
298, 562
Malone, Howard D. 583
99
Maloney, Forrest B. 816
Malungeons 482, 500
Mangrum, Claude T. 312
Marine, Jack 223
Marion, Leonard M. 759A
Marion County, Alabama 811
Marion County, West Virginia 234, 575
Marja, Fern 398
Marketing 794, 803A, 804, 808
Marschner, Francis J. 32, 313
Marsh, C. P. 314
Marshall County, Alabama 607, 959
Martin, Arlee 609
Martin, Isaac 463
Martin, Joe A. 856
Martin, Lee R. 817
Martin, Roxie 247
Maryland 96
Mason, Charles D. 704
Mason, John E. 818
Mason, Marie 248, 314
Mason, Robert L. 30, 930
Mason County, West Virginia 678
Massie, William A. 348
Masters, Frank M. 464
Mathes, C. Hodge 890
Mathes, Wileta 760
Matthews, Matthew T. 33
Matthias, V. P. 958
Mauldin, W. P. 315
Mauney, Margaret 512
Maurer, Beryl 465
Maurer, David W. 958A
Maxwell, James A. 283
Mayer, Henry C. 1035
Mavnor, Theodore R. 610
Mayo, S. C. 135
Mazzei, Frank J. 433
Medicine See Health
Menefee, Robert G. 761
Mennonites 437
Mental health 244. 345, 346, 349, 350A,
351, 352, 354, 1049
Merinar, Elmer K. 705
Merrick, Elliott 71
Men ill, William M. 416A
Metal working industry 132
Methodists 477
Mctzler, W. H. 136
Michigan 264, 267, 268
Migration 218A, 264-328 See also Popu-
lation; urbanization
Miles, Emma B. 34
Miller, Delmas F. 682
Miller, Donald V. 762
Miller, Harold W. 349
Miller, Helen 1036
Miller, Iva A. 350
Miller, L. F. 871
Miller, Nora 205
Milligan, Jack A. 137
Mills, Josephine J. 722
Mills, Robert L. 552
Mills See Textile industry & workers
Minard, Ralph D. 399
Mingo County, West Virginia 164
Minnis, Martha A. 611
Missouri 766
Mitchell, Carrie 552A
Mitchell, Cheophus H. 612
Mitchell County, North Carolina 507A
Mobley, Joe L. 138
Monongahela Valley 64, 489
Monongalia County, West Virginia 236,
355, 426
Monroe County, Tennessee 556, 592
Montgomery, Charles 683
Montgomery, Ernest B. 763
Montgomery, James E. 35, 36, 139
Montgomery County, Virginia 116
Moonlight schools 734, 741, 767, 775
Moonshining 1A, 958 A, 994
Morgan, Charles T. 629
Morgan, E. L. 819
Morgan, Jesse W. 553
Morgan, Lucy 663
Morgan, Rufus 1061 A
Morgan, W. L. 513
Morgan County, Kentucky 134, 298
Morgan County, Tennessee 486, 544, 550,
784, 876
Morgantown, West Virginia 137, 260, 499
Morland, John K. 1037, 1038
Morley, Margaret 37
Morony, Ives G. 373, 432
Morris, Homer L. 336
Morris, Thomas J. 400
Morse, Hermann 466
Mory, Samuel A. 337
Mosby, Robert H. 514
Moss, J. J. 316
"Mountain Life & Work" 1062
Mountain View School 653
Mowbray, A. H. 206
Mover, Egbert 684
Mullikan, Trumas S. 554
Murphy, R. E. 401
Murray, Lena See Ella Enslow
Music & musical instruments 227, 911.
916-949
Musick, Ruth A. 891, 892, 893, 894, 895,
896, 931
Myers, Grace F. 468, 1039
Myers, James 283A
Myers, jerry C. 685
Myers, Will S. 140
N
Nadler, Harry 865
Names 992, 1050, 1051
Nashville Agricultural Normal Institute
650
National Student League 361
100
National Committee for the Defense of
Political Prisoners 374
Negroes 103, 234, 239, 259, 392, 402,
1 481, 483, 484, 490, 497, 499, 597-615,
See also Race relations
Neil, Fred 538
Neskang, S. R. 495, 496
Nestmann, Ralph H. 350A
Neville, Linda 998
New Hill, West Virginia 385
New River 165
Newhouse, Joseph 417
Newspapers 359, 959, 1018, 1063
Nicely, Billy K. 514A
Nicholas County, West Virginia 840, 871
Nichols, Earl 554A
Nicholls, W. D. 791, 796, 820, 821
Nicholls, William H. 141, 141A, 142, 822,
823
Nicks, Roy S. 174
Nicola, Blanche 249
Niebuhr, Reinhold 375
Niles, John S. 932, 933, 934
Nixon, Herman C. 37A, 38
North Carolina 37, 59, 84, 101, 134,
135, 143, 148, 151, 169, 184, 199,
245, 252, 298, 312, 438, 459, 470,
473, 475, 487, 488, 490, 490A, 512,
530, 534, 539, 541, 559. 577, 595,
600, 605, 608. 615, 644-648, 652, 653,
663, 669, 681, 686, 700, 720, 737,
741, 815, 817, 818, 843, 866, 887,
909, 955, 963, 964, 975, 978, 1021,
1040A, 1061
North Carolina. Department of Conserva-
tion 866
Northrup, Herbert R. 402
Norton, Egbert 584
Noss, Marie G. 435
Nurses See Frontier Nursing Service
Nutrition 230, 234, 236, 238, 242, 251,
257, 260, 355
O
Obenhaus, Victor 664
Oconaluftee Valley 1021
Oconee County, South Carolina 167, 571
Odum, Howard W. 39
Ogle, Milton 143
Ohio 302 See also Cincinnati
Ohio River Valley 978
Olmstead, Paul 469
Oneida Institute 980
Ormond, Jesse M. 470
Orr, Thomas B. 764
Osborne, James T. 686
Overton County, Tennessee 62, 326, 743
Owen, Pauline 706
Owens, Bess A. 935
Owsley County, Kentucky 574
Oyler, Merton 141, 317, 318, 319
Packhorse libraries See Libraries
Page, A. A. <i<i.">
Paint Creek, West Virginia 364
Pantalone, Margaret 884A
Park, Foster 1040
Parker, Ruth L. 403
Parks See Recreation; names of indi-
vidual parks
Parks, James R. 471
Parman, Guy D. 824
Parris, John A. 1040A
Parris, Wendall A. 641 A
Parrish, Earl L. 825
Part-time farming 801
Patrick County, Virginia 80
Patteson, G. W. 826-839
Patton, Catherine 497
Paulding County, Georgia 177
Pearce, Albert 338
Pearsall, Marion 40, 249A
Peattie, Roderick 41
Peck, Elizabeth 630
Peck, Millard 840, 841
Pendleton County, West Virginia 150
Penland School 663
Pensions, 94 419, 422
Pentecostal churches 440, 479 See also
Holiness churches
Perdue, Mabel J. 765
Perry County, Kentucky 171, 861, 883
Perry, V F. 375A
Peterson, M. J. 809
Pettigrew, Thomas F. 766
Pettit, Katherine 1001
Phillips, C. D. 803A
Phillips, Wendell B. 666, 667
Physical education 601, 758
Physicians 237
Pickens County, South Carolina 176, 809
Pickeral, J. J. 145
Pickett County, Tennessee 552A
Piedmont College 666, 667
Pieper, Mary G. 472
Pike County, Kentucky 246, 501, 567
Pikeville College 665
Pilot Knob, Tennessee 200
Pine Mountain, Kentucky 958
Pine Mountain Settlement School 668
Pineville. Kentucky 363, 375
Pitcher, June D. 320
Plant location See Industries & Indus-
trialization
Pleasant Hill Academy 664
Pleasants County, West Virginia 1036
Pocahontas County, West Virginia 1048
Politics See Local government
Polk Countv, Georgia 513
Polk County, Tennessee 564, 772A
Poole, Ernest 250
Pope, Liston 473
101
Population 22B, 32, 203, 231, 232, 287-
328, 342, 814 See also Migration
Porter, J. M. 1041, 1042
Porter, W. F. 136, 146, 1048
Poundstone, Sally 724
Powell, Hannah J. 767
Powell County, Kentucky 183, 248, 798
Powers, Ozelle S. 585
Pratt, C. W. 585A
Presbyterians 441, 477
Press See Newspapers
Price support programs 799A
Principals 692, 694, 695, 704, 705
Pringle, Henry F. 631
Promotions, school 757, 763
Protestant Episcopal Church 455
Proverbs See Folklore
Psychiatric care See Mental health
Public health See Health
Public relations See School & community
Public schools See Education
Public welfare 423
Pulaski County, Virginia 117, 802
Putnam, John F. 936
Putnam County, Tennessee 554A
Q
Quails, Daniel 586
Quarles, Mary 207
Rabun County, Georgia 61, 89
Rabun Industrial School 671
Race relations 280, 392, 399, 499 See also
Negroes; schools, desegregation
Radford, Virginia 116
Raine, James W. 42
Raines, Carroll C. 768
Rakestraw, Isaac K. 613
Raleigh County, West Virginia 164, 546,
714, 788
Ramey, James M. 769
Randolph, H. S. 669
Ratliff, G. C. 989
Ratliff, Paul 433A
Ravenswood, West Virginia 307
Ray, A. H. 536
Ray, Herman 147
Reading 717, 719, 774, See also Libraries
Recreation 155A, 182, 197, 210, 211, 395,
981, 995, 1053A, 1054
Reece, W. T. 937
Reeves, John E. 175
Reforestation 975
Reid, Robert L. 800
Relief See Public welfare
Religion 22, 73, 375, 397, 404, 435-480,
1039
Retardation (school) See Promotions
Reynolds, James E. 351
Reynolds, Roy L. 208
Reynolds, Ruth A. 770
Rhyme, Edwin 176
Rice, Lawrence K. 587
Rice, Sidney W. 670
Rich, Mark 404
Richardson, Ethel P. 937
Ridenour, George L. 588
Ritchie, Andrew J. 671
Ritchie, Jean 928, 940, 941
Roane County, Tennessee 152, 558, 580,
730, 825
Roane County, West Virginia 895
Roanoke County, Virginia 118, 153
Roberts, Leonard W. 209, 897, 898, 899,
900, 901
Roberts, Lydia J. 25
Robertson County, Kentucky 289, 318,
324, 328
Robinette, Frank L. 687
Rochester, Anna 374
Rockbridge County, Virginia 82, 827
Rockcastle County, Kentucky 584
Rogers, E. G. 902, 903, 904
Rogers, Jack 405
Rogers, Katherine V. 177
Rolston, Frances 589
Romagnoli, A. L. 771
Roper, Rosalie 210
Ross, Charles R. 973, 1044
Ross, Ernest L. 537
Ross, Malcolm 148, 339
Ross, W. D. 352
Rothrock, Mary U. 725
Rouse, Elaine, 418
Rouse, W. L. 820
Rugby, Tennessee 1014
Rugs, 965
Russell County, Virginia 119, 154, 848,
850
Rutherford County, North Carolina 615,
700
Ruttan, Vernon W. 842
Ryland, Garnett 474
Saalbach, W. F. 1045
Saint Clair County, Alabama 597
Salem College 649
Sanders Retta E. 772
Save the Children Federation 200, 746,
1000
Scarborough, Dorthy 942
Schmitt, Leonard R. 211
School and community 676-690, 735
School attendance 501-516, 603, 604, 610,
1028
School boards 696
School buildings 749, 752, 772
School bus transportation 745, 745A, 755,
768, 772A, 777, 778, 779, 780, 782, 784
School discipline 729
School enrollment 735A, 741A
102
School finance 545, 546, 547, 551, 552,
553, 555, 556
School libraries See Libraries, school
School lunches 738, 746, 765, 799 A
Schools, desegregation 751, 755 A, 761,
766, 976, 997, 1003
Schwendeman, J. R. 149
Scott, George H. 419
Scott County, Tennessee 590, 687, 777,
876
Scott County, Virginia 120, 710
Seay, Maurice F. 707
Seeger, Charles 943
Segregation See Negroes; race relations;
schools, desegregation
Sells, Cecil O. 772A
Selznick, Philip 1046
Semple, Ellen C. 43
Setters, Jilson 946
Sevier County, Tennessee 36, 555, 971
Sexton, Oswell S. 590
Shackelford, N. 1047
Shafer, Holly M. 515
Shalett, Sidney 150
Sharp, Cecil J. 920, 944
Shea, John P. 867
Shelton, Farrar V. 802, 835
Shelton, Mary E. 884A
Shelton, Tom 538
Shenandoah County, Virginia 837
Sheppard, Muriel 44, 151
Sherman, Mandel 45, 212, 224
Shivaree 876
Shull, S. C. 836, 837
Singh, Har S. 843
Sizer, Leonard M. 213, 321, 1048, 1049
Sizer, Miriam 1050, 1051
Slone, Alice H. 773
Sloop, Mary T. 252
Slotkin, James S. 284
Smelcer, Buna 555
Smiley, David 475
Smith, Dick W. 844
Smith, Eldon D. 285, 322
Smith, Elizabeth V. 613A
Smith, Frank H. 905
Smith, J. Russell 815
Smith, Lee S. 152
Smith, Nena G. 774
Smith, Richard C. 1052
Smoky Mountains See Great Smoky
Mountains
Smyth County, Virginia 121, 660, 838
Social security 797
Social studies, teaching 753
Society of Soul Winners 461
Soil erosion See Erosion
Sollenberger, Richard T. 214
Somers, Gerald G. 323, 376, 420
South Carolina 86, 97, 167, 179, 301, 449,
554, 571, 708, 709, 733, 735, 809
Southern Educational Board 539
"Southern Folklore Quarterly" 874
Spaulding, Arthur W. 46
Spau Iding, Irving A. 324
Special education 731, 733
Speech 950-962
Speech education 743
Spencer, Tennessee 181
Spencer, West Virginia 81, 197
Spero, Sterling D. 377
Spillman, Claude O. 846
Spivak, John L. 1053
Stanberry, Thomas W. 707A
Standard of Living 134, 326
Starr, Donald H. 614
Stevens, G. R. 153
Stewart, Acie 516
Stewart, Cora W. 775
Stodtbeck, Fred 325
Stonecipher, E. E. 776
Stout, Ralph E. 688
Stovall, Henry 672A
Stradley, William B. 178, 556
Strang, Ruth 689
Strawberry industry 804A
Strip mining 429
Strong, Edna R. 406
Strunk, Flonnie 777
Stuart, Jesse 47, 622, 623, 673, 908A
Stump, Roy J. 778
Sturgis, Dudley C. 326
Sullivan County, Tennessee 77, 159, 171,
471, 532, 560, 657, 680, 726, 732
Summers County, West Virginia 788
Superstitions 195, 234, 885, 913 See also
Folklore
Sutherland, E. J. 906
Swain County, North Carolina 541
Swift, Kate 105 3 A
Swiss 485, 486, 491, 495, 49G
Swope, Paul W. 779
Tadlock, E. V. 476
Talladega County, Alabama 239, 603
Tang, Anthony M. 847
Tate, Leland B. 154, 155, 253
Taylor, Alva W. 779A
Taylor, James M. 708
Taylor, John M. 591
Taylor, Paul F. 378
Taylor, Vernon 945
Tazwell County, Virginia 122, 604
Teachers 607, 611, 612, 691-709
Temperance 1027
Tennessee 36, 40, 54, 56, 62, 63, 67, 68,
69, 74, 77, 94, 105, 133, 134, 147,
152, 159, 163, 174, 178-81, 194, 195,
200, 206, 208, 210, 211, 225, 226,
227, 242, 258, 259, 268, 296, 305 A,
306, 311, 312, 326, 348, 367, 368,
375A, 415, 423, 424, 439, 463, 165,
469, 471, 472, 481, 484, 486, 491,
103
493, 495, 496, 500, 50OA, 503, 506,
507, 508, 509, 510, 518. 522, 523,
525, 529, 532, 533, 536, 537, 538, 542,
544, 545, 548, 549, 550, 551, 552A,
554A, 555, 556, 557, 558, 560, 561,
564, 569, 576,, 579, 580, 583, 585,
585 A, 588, 590, 592, 594, 598, 601, 609,
613, 613A, 620, 637-643, 650, 651,
656, 657, 664, 670, 673, 676, 679,
680, 684, 686, 687, 688, 697, 701,
702, 703, 704, 706, 707A, 715, 717,
718, 722, 725, 725A, 726, 729, 730,
731, 732, 743, 744, 745, 745A, 749,
751, 752. 753, 754, 755, 758, 759A,
760, 763, 768, 770, 772A, 774, 776,
777, 780A, 781, 782, 784, 785, 786,
789, 790, 792, 793, 794A, 800, 803,
805, 806, 808, 812, 814, 816, 824,
825, 844, 856, 875, 876, 885, 888,
889, 890, 902, 903, 904, 918, 923,
929. 930. 956. 961, 971, 990, 994.
1009, 1010, 1012, 1022, 1031, 1040,
1060
Tennessee. Legislative Council 725A
Tennessee River 13
Tennessee State Planning Commission
155 A
Tennessee Taxpavers Association 179, 180
Tennessee Valley 88, 141, 141A, 142, 170,
463, 822, 823, 842, 863, 868, 975, 977,
991
Tennessee Vallev Authoritv 13, 868, 975,
977, 984, 1011, 1026, 1046, 1054 1065
Tennessee Vallev Authority. Bibliography
1055, 1056
Textile industry & workers 473, 737, 983,
1002, 1009A, 1012, 1023. 1033, 1034,
1037, 1038
Thomas, Helen W. 726
Thomas, Jean 48, 49, 907, 946. 947, 1057,
1058
Thomas, Walter B. 540
Thomas. William R. 1059
Thomas, Winburn T. 642
Thomasson, L. F. 541
Thompson, Craig 379
Thompson, James H. 156, 157, 421
Thompson, Samuel H. 1060
Thornburgh, Laura 49A
Tiffany, E. L. 254
Tinkler, May C. 959
Tobacco 799
Tocca Experimental Forest 71
Toe River Valley 44
Torbert, E. N. 803
Torrey, Bradford 1061
Tourist industry 990
Tower, J. Allen 498
Town sites 104
Towns County, Georgia 721, 810
Toys 964
Transportation See School bus transpor-
tation
Traphill Institute 652
Truancy See School attendance
Truesdell, Fred L. 615
Tuberculosis 228
Tug River Valley 1032
Tunley, Roul 158
Turner, Byron J. 780
Tuscaloosa County, Alabama 505, 599
Tuskegee Institute 255
Tyler County, West Virginia 566, 1036
U
Ulmer, Mary 1061A
Umbarger, Catherine C. 674
Unemployment See Employment
Union County, Georgia 721
United Mine Workers of America 402.
419, 422
U.S. Coal Mines Administration 353
U.S. Congress. House. Select Committee
to Investigate the Interstate Migra-
tion of Destitute Citizens 327
U.S. Congress. Senate. Committee on Edu-
cation and Labor 380
U.S. Congress, Senate. Committee on In-
terstate Commerce 381
U.S. Congress. Senate. Special Committee
on Unemployment Problems (1959)
50
U.S. Department of Agriculture 51, 869
Upper East Tennessee Regional Planning
Commission 159
Urbanization 218A, 264-86, 393, 842 See
also Industries & industrialization
Van Ark, Carroll 181
Vance, Rupert B. 52
Vaughn, Marshall E. 1062
Veal, Cora T. 592
Verhoeff, Mary 340
Vernon, J. J. 848, 849, 850
Vinson, Lacy W. 557
Virginia 12, 60, 76, 79, 80, 82, 83, 92,
93, 98, 106-25, 127, 130, 145, 153-55,
160, 162, 196, 202, 229, 244, 253,
308, 309, 387, 390, 406, 437, 439,
446, 474, 521, 593, 604, 611, 660,
674, 740, 750, 802, 808, 819, 826-
839, 848, 849, 850. 906, 918, 922,
1008, 1050, 1051, 1061
Vocational Agriculture See Agricultural
education
Vocational education 744, 762
Vocational guidance See Guidance
Vogel, John 675
Votaw, Albert N. 286
W
Wadleigh. Francis R. 329
Wakefield, Dan 643
104
Walker, Lewis M. 161
Walker, Zeddie 542
Walker County, Georgia 606
Wallace, Donald 908
Waller, Eugene 624
Walters, R. N. 625, 1063
War, effects of 287, 303, 310
Warburton, Amber 408
Warren County, Virginia 98
Washington, Mary 908A
Washington (State) 295
Washington County, Tennessee 159, 180,
242, 510, 532, 538, 701, 732, 763,
816
Washington County, Virginia 83, 123
Watauga County, North Carolina 530
Water pollution 978. 1047
Watkins, F. C. 1064
Wayne County, Kentucky 596, 900
Weatherford, Willis D. 53, 477
Weaver, Emma 974
Weaver, Hazel F. 593
Weaving 970
Webb, George W. 163, 870
Webster County, West Virginia 840, 871
Weir, Donald E. 780A
Weitzell, E. C. 851, 871
Welch, Frank J. 852
Wengert, Norman I. 1065
Weslager, C. A. 487 A
West, John F. 909
West Virginia 64, 72, 81, 86A, 100, 104,
129, 131, 132, 136, 137, 146, 150, 156-
58, 164, 165, 182, 188, 197, 203A,
213, 231, 234, 236. 238, 260, 307,
308, 309, 316, 320, 321, 323, 331,
332, 336, 339, 341, 342, 344, 345,
346, 347, 349, 350A, 351, 355, 357,
358, 364, 365, 369, 371 A, 373, 379,
380, 381, 382, 383, 384, 385, 392,
395, 397, 398, 399, 400, 401, 404,
405, 410, 412, 421, 426, 432, 433,
451, 485, 489, 497, 499, 514, 515,
516, 524, 543, 546, 553, 566, 568,
573, 575, 582, 649, 677, 678, 682,
683, 690, 692, 693, 695, 696, 705,
713, 714, 738, 755A, 757, 764, 765,
769, 771, 772, 778, 779, 780, 783,
788, 808, 840, 841, 851, 853, 871,
881 A, 884A, 886, 891, 892, 893, 894,
895, 896, 910, 931, 1018, 1027, 1032,
1036, 1043, 1048, 1049
West Virginia. Department of Employ-
ment Security 164
West Virginia. Governor's Investigating
Committee 381A
West Virginia Legislative Interim Com-
mittee 543
West Virginia State College 997
West Virginia State Federation of Labor
1004A
Westover, J. H. 960
Wetzel County, West Virginia 886, 1036
Wharton, May C. 256, 1020
Wheeler, Jesse H. 853
Wheeler, Lester R. 54, 225, 226, 227, 257,
258, 478
Wheeler, V. D. 227
Wheelwright, Kentucky 409
Whisman, John D. 1066
Whitaker, Fess 55
Whitaker, Walter C. 47S A
White, Donald 910
White, Edwin E. 56
White, Elizabeth 341
White, Thomas E. 422
White County, Tennessee 504
Whitley County, Kentucky 173
Whitman, Robert H. 259
Whitman, Ruth H. 260
Widen, West Virginia 358, 379, 381A
Wiesel, Garl 354
Wiggins, Timothy 261
Wight, Edward A. 728
Wildasin, Frances W. 781
Wilder, Tennessee 375A
Wilfong, Harry D. 434
Wilgus, D. K. 914, 948
Wilkes County, North Carolina 559, 605,
652, 653, 909
Willeford, Mary B. 262
William, Ellis R. 499
Williams, Bertha L. 727
Williams, Claude C. 479
Williams, Cratis 911, 912, 913, 960A
Williams, Dorcas A. 355
Williams, Drew B. 782
Williams, Faith 215
Williams, Frank B. 594
Williams, L. M. 409
Williams, Pearl D. 558
Williams, Robin M. 328
Williams, Stanley B. 410
Wilson, Gordon 949
Wilson, Isabella 783
Wilson, L. C. 690
Wilson, Louis R. 728
Wilson, Ross H. 544
Wilson, Samuel T. 57
Wilson, Warren H. 480
Wise County, Virginia 124, 127
Withington, Alfreda 58
Withoft, Mabel S. 626
Witzel, William T. 165
Wolf, Walter 498
Wolfe, Thomas 1064
Wood, Gordon 961
Wood, Harriette 166, 627
Wood County, West Virginia 1036
Woodbridge, Hensley C. 914, 962
Woods, Roy C. 1067, 1068
Woodside, Robert E. 595
Woodson, Marshall S. 167
Woodworking Industry 132, 149
105
Woody, Robert H. 59 Y
ISrV>i %sr*£s?s-& k CaroIina 148
Wrllh!; SSina 915 V °"' h CentOT 210 ' 469 S « »'» R <*™"o„
Writers' Project. Kentucky 168 Z
Wyoming County West Virginia 164, 516, Zimmerman, Carle C. 217
053, jOH, 1U^» Zumstein William C 784
Wythe County, Virginia 82, 125, 839 uuanxan, William C. 784
106
BULLETIN OF THE
Russell Sage Foundation Library
NUMBER 115 - - OCTOBER, 1932
THE SOUTHERN HIGHLANDER
PUBLISHED BI-MONTHLY
10 Cents a Copy 50 Cents a Year
RUSSELL SAGE FOUNDATION
130 East 22d Street
New York
Entered as second'dass matter October 24, 1913, at the Post Office at New York,
N. Y., under the Act of August 24, 1912
THE SOUTHERN HIGHLANDER: A Selected Bibliography
Compiled by Mabel A. Badcock
This brief bibliography is intended to supplement those references of general interest included in the Bibliog-
raphy on the Southern Highlands compiled by Mrs. Campbell in 1920, together with those in the bibliography in
Mr. Campbell's book "The Southern Highlander" published a year later. With the exception of a few books of
outstanding value, an effort has been made to avoid repetition.
Thomas, W. R. Life among the hills and
mountains of Kentucky. 414 p. Harold, Ky.
Sandy Valley pub. co. 1926.
The Author "born under the brow of the great
Cumberland mountains of the Eastern highlands of
Kentucky" describes briefly the forty counties included
in his regional study. The book is dedicated to the
mountain folks of Kentucky.
Thompson, S. H. Highlanders of the
South. 86 p. N. Y. Methodist book con-
cern, 1910.
Written from the missionary's standpoint.
Wentworth, F. B. Strange people; weird
customs and curious habits of the Kentucky
mountaineers. 53 p. Winchester, Ky. The
Author, n. d.
PERIODICALS
Mountain life and work, published by
Conference of Southern mountain workers at
Berea College, Berea, Ky. "in the interest of
fellowship and mutual understanding between
the Appalachian Mountains and the rest of
the nation."
It has been impossible in as brief a list to single out
articles from this valuable magazine and it is therefore
hoped that this general note will convey the measure
of its significance.
Calkins, M. C. Friends Creek. (in
Survey, v. 47, p. 845-50, February 25, 1922)
A "First-hand" account illustrative of the work
carried on by two settlement workers who were trans-
planted from New York City to a small community in
the Southern highlands.
Carter, I. G. Mountain white folk-lore:
tales from the southern Blue Ridge, (in Jour,
of American folk-lore. v. 38, p. 340-74,
June 1925)
Author claims that while the collection of Blue Ridge
mountain ballads has gone steadily on there has been
little done about the collection of old folk tales. She
has therefore presented a number here.
Combs, J. Language of the Southern
highlanders. (in Publications of Modern
language assn. v. 46, p. 1302-22, December
1931)
The Author of this graphic article is himself a
"Kentucky highlander" and heard many of the
illustrative phrases he uses in childhood.
Davis, D. H. Changing role of the
Kentucky mountains and the passing of the
Kentucky mountaineer, (in Jour, of geog-
raphy, v. 24, p. 41-52, February 1925)
Article is fully illustrated.
Study of the succession of human
BIBLIOGRAPHIES
Russell Sage foundation. Library.
The Southern highlands, comp. by Mrs. O. D.
Campbell. (Library bulletin no. 39, 1920)
United States. Library of congress.
List of references on the mountain whites.
13 p. (typewritten) 1922.
GENERAL
Campbell, J. C. Southern highlander
and his homeland. 405 p. N. Y. Russell
Sage foundation, 1921.
Bibliography, p. 375-89.
Campbell, Mrs. O. D. and Sharp, C. J.
English folk songs from the Southern Appa-
lachians; comprising 122 songs and ballads,
and 323 tunes. 341 p. N. Y. Putnam, 1917.
Lack of space prevents the inclusion of many of the
other excellent collections of mountain songs and
ballads. The Russell Sage foundation library will,
however, be glad to send a list of such collections to
any one desiring it.
Cobb, A. C. Kinfolks, Kentucky moun-
tain rhymes. 82 p. Boston, Houghton, 1922.
Furman, Lucy. Quare women; a story
of the Kentucky mountains. 219 p. Boston,
Atlantic monthly press, 1923.
Describes in fiction form the work of the Hindman
Settlement School among the Kentucky mountaineers.
The story is continued in the author's later book
"Glass Windows; a story of the quare women,"
published by Little, Brown of Boston in 1925.
Goodrich, F. L. Mountain homespun.
91 p. New Haven, Yale univ. press, 1931.
Describes the handicrafts of the Southern mountains
and some of the women engaged in them.
Kephart, Horace. Our Southern high-
landers. New & enl. ed. N. Y. Macmillan,
1926.
Raine, J. W. Land of saddle-bags; a
study of the mountain people of Appalachia.
260 p. N. Y. Council of women for home
missions and Missionary educ. movement of
the U. S. and Canada, cl924.
Randolph, Vance. (The) Ozarks; an
American survival of primitive society. 310
p. N. Y. Vanguard press, 1931.
Southern mountain workers confer-
ence. Condensed report of the Conference,
Knoxville, Tennessee, April 23, 1914. 20 p.
Knoxville, The Conference, 1914.
Since the publication of the periodical, Mountain
life and work in April 1925, the second number of each
volume has contained the Papers of the Annual confer-
ence of Southern mountain workers.
activities in the Kentucky mountains, a
dissected highland area, (in Jour, of geog-
raphy, v. 29, p. 85-100, March 1930)
Deals briefly with the Kentucky mountains from the
pre-historic period to the present time. States that
"the stalwart mountaineer still exists in fiction, but his
counterpart in real life is rare."
An excellent article.
Duncan, H. G. Southern highlanders.
(in Jour, of applied sociology, v. 10, p.
556-61, July 1926)
Descriptive article criticizing the literature on the
Southern highlander.
Duncan, H. G. and Duncan, W. L.
Superstitions and sayings among the Southern
highlanders. (in Jour. American folk-lore.
v. 42, p. 233-37, July 1929)
Harlow, A. F. Frontier people of the
Appalachians, (in Travel, v. 39, p. 11-14,
June 1922)
A Fully illustrated article which is written in a sym-
pathetic spirit. Deals mainly with the handicrafts of
the mountaineer.
Hirsch, N. D. M. Experimental study of
the East Kentucky mountaineers; a study in
heredity and environment. (Genetic psychol-
ogy monographs, v. 3, no. 3, March 1928)
After a brief generalization the author proceeds to
describe his experimental tests. Findings are sum-
marized in a chapter entitled — Anthropological and
sociological data. "The Future of the East Kentucky
Mountaineer," closes the article.
Hitch, M. A. Life in a Blue Ridge Hol-
low, (in Jour, of geography, v. 30, p. 309-22,
November 1931)
The "Hollow" described in this article is part of the
region which is under consideration by the National
Park Commission. Should it be taken over for a
Federal park it will seriously affect the mountaineers
who find it difficult to live and work elsewhere. A map
and illustrations are included.
Holliday, G. Singing games of the South-
ern mountains, (in Overland and Out west,
n. s. v. 89, p. 9+ December 1931)
Niles, J. J. In defense of the backwoods;
mountaineer folk-songs, (in Scribner's maga-
zine, v. 83, p. 738-45, June 1928)
A Collection of songs interspersed with short narra-
tives by one who came from the backwoods.
White pioneers and black, (in
Musical quar. v. 18, p. 60-75, January 1932)
An Interesting comparison of the music of the
Southern mountaineer and the Negro, historically
presented.
Porter, L. S. In search of local color.
(in Harper's magazine, v. 145, p. 281-94,
451-66, August-September 1922)
An Illustrated story of the Kentucky mountains
told by a young writer.
Sherman, M. Environment and mental
development; a study of an isolated com-
munity, (in Jour, of the American assn. of
university women, v. 23, p. 137-140, April
1930)
"A Preliminary psychological survey of an isolated
community in Virginia consisting of a group of families
living in a hollow of the Shenandoah Valley."
Sutherland, E. J. Changing Southern
mountaineer; from a native mountaineer's
standpoint, (in Virginia jour, of education,
v. 24, p. 72-75, October 1930)
Thornborough, Laura. Americans the
20th century forgot; a visit to our contempo-
rary ancestors in the Great Smokies — Cus-
toms surviving from the Elizabethan age —
the result of centuries of isolation, rllustrated.
(in Travel, v. 50, p. 25-28, April 1928)
Ulmann, Mrs. Doris. Mountaineers of
Kentucky; a series of portrait studies, (in
Scribner's magazine, v. 83, p. 675-81, June
1928)
Six beautiful photographs of typical mountaineers.
Wheeler, L. R. The Intelligence of East
Tennessee mountain children, (in Jour, of
educ. psychology, v. 23, p. 351-70, May
1932)
Describes the results of various tests and compares
the Tennessee mountain children with those of Ken-
tucky, also with the children tested in rural, city and
general population of Illinois. Dwells upon the earlier
article of N. D. M. Hirsch.
BIOGRAPHY
Byers, Tracy. Martha Berry, the Sunday
lady of Possum Trot. 268 p. N. Y. Putnam,
1932.
Interesting account of the life and work of the
founder of the Mount Berry School.
Cowan, S. K. Sergeant York and his
people. 292 p. N.Y. Funk& Wagnalls, 1922.
Valuable as showing one mountaineer's accomplish-
ment in the face of emergency.
Periodicals
Eastman, Fred. Artist in religion; wel-
fare activities of Frances Goodrich. (in
Christian Century, v. 47, p. 963-64, August
6, 1930)
Tells of Frances Goodrich's determination to give up
her own career tor the work in the Southern mountains.
Gavit, J. P. Boot strapping among the
pioneers, (in Survey, v. 68, p. 304-306,
July 1, 1932)
A Brief tale of one. James G. K. McClure, who went
to North Carolina for health and stayed to help.
Reed, L. E. My little learning; a frag-
ment of autobiographv. (in Atlantic monthly.
v. 135, p. 749-54, June 1925)
The Experience of a young Southern mountaineer
who leaves the place of his birth but ultimately returns
to take up work there.
Withington, Alfreda. The Mountain
doctor, (in Atlantic monthly, v. 150, p.
257-67, September 1932)
Editor's note — After many years of private practi6e.
Dr. Vv'ithington enlisted as a surgeon in the Red Cross.
When, after the Armistice, the completion of her work
in France brought her home, she sought in the remote
undoctored wilds of the Kentucky mountains an oppor-
tunity for service not dissimilar, in spirit at least, to
her work at the front.
Continued in the October issue. Final episodes to
be given in the December number.
EDUCATION
Hatcher, O. L. ed. (A) Mountain school;
a study made by the Southern woman's edu-
cational alliance and Konnarock training
school. 248 p. Richmond, Va. Garrett &
Massie, inc. cl°30.
Southern mountain schools maintained by
denominational and independent agencies.
Rev. ed. N. Y. Russell Sage foundation, 1929.
Stewart, Mrs. C. W. Moonlight schools
for the emancipation of adult illiterates.
194 p. N. Y. Dutton, cl922.
Waller, E. C. Survey of the church and
independent schools and colleges of the
Southern Appalachians; a thesis submitted
to the Graduate committee of the University
of Tennessee. 98 p. (mimeographed) Knox-
ville, The Author, 1931.
Bibliography, p. 96. Appendix — List of schools
arranged under State, p. 97.
Periodicals
Alderman, L. R. Buncombe county's
excellent work for adult illiterates, (in School
life. v. 12, p. 176-79, May 1927)
Describes the devoted work of Mrs. Elizabeth
Morris. Expresses surprise at the ease with which the
adult illiterate learns.
Benschaten, J. R. Just to read and
write! (in World's work. v. 59, p. 77-80,
December 1930)
Describes the work initiated by Cora Wilson Stewart
and its follow-up to-day.
Campbell, Mrs. O. D. I sing behind the
plough, (in Jour, of adult education (Amer-
ican), v. 2, p. 248-59, June 1930)
A Searching inquiry into the educational effort now
being carried on in the Southern highlands. This
article also distributed by the John C. Campbell folk
school, Brasstown. N. C.
Clinkscales, J. G. Story of a determined
doctor, (in Methodist quar. rev. v. 77, p.
44M-60, July 1928)
Tells of a mountain doctor who having sought and
found a cultural education in his mature years, returned
to his people and strove to improve their educational
opportunities.
Miller, D. W. Vocational education in
the Southern mountains. (in Education,
v. 50, p. 429-31, March 1930)
A Criticism of the vocational education now carried
or. in the Southern highlands and a plea for its improve-
ment.
Ridgway, F. H. Kentucky experiment
in reading. (in Library jour. v. 50, p.
954-56, November 15, 1926)
A Staff member of the Berea College Library des-
cribes the experimental work of the Book Wagon among
the mountaineers of Kentucky and the gradual devel-
opment of a resolve to concentrate on work with the
mountain children.
Weldon, Beulah. Foot hills (illustrated),
(in Survey, v. 58, p. 40-42, April 1, 1927)
"The First prize story in the third quarterly Harmon
Survey Award in the field of public education."
HEALTH
Committee on the costs of medical care.
Frontier nursing service, by Anne Wilson.
16 p. Wash. D. C. the Committee, 1932.
(Miscellaneous contributions, no. 10)
Frontier nursing service, Lexington, Ky.
Quarterly bulletin.
Gardner, Mrs. Caroline. Clever country;
Kentucky mountain trails. 159 p. N. Y.
Revell, 1931.
Describes the work of the Frontier nursing service.
Poole, Ernest. Nurses on horseback.
168 p. N. Y. Macmillan, 1932.
Another vivid account of the work of the Frontier
Nursing Service, including a detailed sketch of the life
of its founder, Mary Breckinridge. The illustrations
have the charm of original snap shots.
United States. Children's bureau.
Publications:
no. 110, Nutrition and care of children in
a mountain county of Kentucky,
by Lydia Roberts. 1922.
no. 120, Maternity and infant care in a
mountain county in Georgia, by
Glenn Steele. 1923.
Periodicals
Bradley, F. S. Redemption of Appalachia.
(in Hygeia. v. 9, p. 26-30, January 1931)
Describes early days of Berea College during an
epidemic and the consequent reactions among the
mountaineers whose daughters were attending school.
Breckinridge, Mary. Is birth control
the answer? (in Harper's magazine, v. 163,
p. 157-63, July 1931)
The Author, founder of the Frontier nursing service,
believes not. A frank discussion of the question as it
affects the Southern mountaineer.
Cunningham, A. E. Word from old
Kentucky, (in Public health nurse, v. 14,
p. 535-36, October 1922)
This nurse, as author, tells of her varied job which
covers several small towns in addition to rural districts.
Brief but to the point.
Fell, Frances. A Christmas "least-one"
on Hell-fer-Sartin. (in Public health nurse.
v. 22, p. 605-606, December 1930)
Describes the arrival of a Christmas baby, cared for
by the Frontier nursing service.
Other articles describing the work of the Service
may be found in various issues of this periodical.
McBrayer, L. B. and Dansdill, T.
Health project on yon side of the mountain,
(in Hygeia. v. 4, p. 7-10, January 1926)
How health rules were taught to a group of North
Carolina mountaineers thro the enthusiasm and good
will of the local teacher.
Solenberger, E. R. Nurses on horseback;
Frontier nursing service, (in Hygeia. v. 9,
p. 633-38, July 1931)
Same cond. Amer. jour, of pub. health, v. 21, p.
953-4. August 1931.
An Illustrated article giving a brief history of the
Frontier Nursing Service and describing the natural
dangers surmounted by its nurses.